Scale-based user-physiological heuristic systems

ABSTRACT

Certain aspects of the disclosure are directed to an apparatus including a scale and risk-assessment circuitry which is configured to assess a condition likely linked to the user. The scale includes a platform, and data-procurement circuitry for collecting signals specific to the user and cardio-physiological measurements. The scale includes processing circuitry to process data obtained by the data-procurement circuitry, therefrom generates cardio-related physiologic data, and sends an alert of the condition. The risk-assessment circuitry identifies a risk that the user has a condition based on the reference information and the user data provided by the scale and outputs generic information correlating to the condition to the scale that is tailored based on the identified risk.

OVERVIEW

Various aspects of the present disclosure are directed toward methods, systems and apparatuses that are useful in a user-physiological heuristics using scale-obtained data.

Various aspects of the present disclosure are direct toward monitoring a variety of different physiological characteristics for many different applications. For instance, physiological monitoring instruments are often used to measure a number of patient vital signs, including blood oxygen level, body temperature, respiration rate and electrical activity for electrocardiogram (ECG) or electroencephalogram (EEG) measurements. For ECG measurements, a number of electrocardiograph leads may be connected to a patient's skin, and are used to obtain a signal from the patient.

Obtaining physiological signals (e.g., data) can often require specialty equipment and intervention with medical professionals. For many applications, such requirements may be costly or burdensome. These and other matters have presented challenges to monitoring physiological characteristics.

Aspects of the present disclosure are directed to a platform apparatus and external circuitry that provide various user-physiological heuristics to users. The platform apparatus, such as a body weight scale, provides the feature of collecting scale-obtained data including cardio-physiological measurements from a user while the user is standing on the platform apparatus and outputting the scale-obtained data to external circuitry. In various related aspects, the platform apparatus secures the scale-obtained data that is communicated by removing data that identifies the user from the user data and/or the platform apparatus or external circuitry adds an alias ID to the user data. The external circuitry uses the scale-obtained data by identifying one or more risks that the user has a condition, such as a disease or disorder, using scale-obtained data and determining and outputting generic health information that is not regulated by a government entity and that is tailored to the user based on the identified risks. Thereby, the data provided to the user is not regulated by a government entity and the scale can be sold over-the-counter. In various aspects, the external circuitry provides additional optional features such as determining a risk that the user has a condition using the scale-obtained data, providing generic misdiagnosis data in response to an indication that the user has been diagnosed with a condition by a physician, providing user-tailored advertisements using the scale-obtained data, and/or providing an alert in response to the scale-obtained data being indicative of an emergency and/or particular condition of the user. The external circuitry, in related aspects, determines an additional test or questions to ask the user and outputs the additional test or questions to the user. The platform apparatus, in some aspects, performs the additional test or provides the questions to the user. For example, the external circuitry and platform apparatus are used as feedback to further refine various conditions and/or risks that the user may have.

As a specific example, a user stands on a platform apparatus and the platform apparatus sends scale-obtained data to the external circuitry, including demographic information of the user. The demographic information of the user indicates that the user is a female that is seventy-one years old, is overweight for her height, and recently had an increase in weight. The external circuitry compares the user data to reference information. The reference information may include an indication that females over the age of sixty, that are overweight, and have a history of depression are at a higher risk for atrial fibrillation. Additional reference information indicates various cardiogram characteristics of atrial fibrillation, such as undetected or fibrillating p-waves, an atrial rate of four-hundred to six-hundred beats per minute, and irregular and variable heart rate. The external circuitry identifies that the user matches at least portions of the reference information indicating the user is at risk for atrial fibrillation. For instance, the user's cardiogram as measured by the scale includes undetected p-waves and an irregular heart rate. The external circuitry identifies and/or derives generic information on atrial fibrillation that includes various symptoms and risks factors for the condition (e.g., health condition) and suggestions to the user. The generic information is output by the circuitry to the platform apparatus and displayed to the user using the platform apparatus and/or another user device.

Another specific example includes a user that is identified as being at risk for arterial stiffness. The user stands on the platform apparatus and, in response, the platform apparatus collects and outputs user data, including demographic information of the user. The external circuitry compares the user data to reference information and identifies that the user data matches various symptoms and demographic risks for arterial stiffness. For example, the demographic information of the user indicates that the user is overweight and diabetic and the scale-obtained user data indicates that the users has had an increase in pulse wave velocity. The external circuitry identifies and/or derives generic information on arterial stiffness that includes various symptoms and risks factors and suggestions to the user. The generic information is output by the circuitry to the platform apparatus and displayed to the user using the platform apparatus and/or another user device.

In certain embodiments, the present disclosure is directed to apparatuses and methods including a scale and external circuitry. The scale includes a user display to display data to a user while the user is standing on the scale, a platform for a user to stand on, data-procurement circuitry, and processing circuitry. The data-procurement circuitry includes force sensor circuitry and a plurality of electrodes integrated with the platform for engaging the user with electrical signals and collecting signals indicative of the user's identity and cardio-physiological measurements while the user is standing on the platform. The processing circuitry includes a CPU and a memory circuit with user corresponding data stored in the memory circuit. The processing circuitry is arranged with (e.g., electrically integrated with or otherwise in communication) with the force sensor circuitry and the plurality of electrodes and configured to process data obtained by the data-procurement circuitry while the user is standing on the platform and therefrom derive and output user data to external circuitry, including data indicative with the user's identity and the cardio-physiological measurements, for assessment at a remote location that is not integrated within the scale. The output circuitry can display the user's weight via a user interface and outputs the data indicative of the user's identity and/or the user data generated cardio-related physiologic data from the scale for reception at a remote location. The user interface can either be integrated with the platform and the plurality of electrodes and/or can be integrated with external circuitry that is not located within the platform.

The user interface includes or refers to interactive components of a device (e.g., the scale) and circuitry configured to allow interaction of a user with the scale (e.g., hardware input/output components, such as a screen, speaker components, keyboard, touchscreen, etc., and circuitry to process the inputs). The user interface can be or include a graphical user interface (GUI), a foot-controlled user interface (FUI), and/or voice input/output circuitry, each of which is further described herein. The user interface is integrated with the platform (e.g., internal to the scale) and/or is integrated with external circuitry that is not located under the platform, in various aspects.

The external circuitry includes a processing circuitry and a memory circuit. The memory circuit stores reference information. For example, the external circuitry receives the user data and identifies a risk that the user has a condition using the reference information and the user data provided by the scale. Further, the external circuitry outputs generic health information correlating to the condition to the scale that is tailored based on the identified risk. The risk of a condition, as used herein, includes a probability that the user has the condition and a severity of the condition. For example, in various embodiments, the generic health information is output in response to the probability and severity being greater than a threshold.

Various specific embodiments include methods for identifying a risk that the user has a condition. For example, various method embodiments includes engaging a user, via a scale, with electrical signals and, therefrom, collecting signals indicative of the user's identity and cardio-physiological measurements while the user is standing on the platform. The scale includes a user display to display data to a user while the user is standing on the scale, a platform for a user to stand on, data-procurement circuitry, processing circuitry, and an output circuit. The data-procurement circuitry includes force sensor circuitry and a plurality of electrodes integrated with the platform. The processing circuitry is electrically integrated with the force sensor circuitry and the plurality of electrodes. The method includes processing, using the processing circuitry, data obtained by the data-procurement circuitry while the user is standing on the platform and therefrom generating cardio-related physiological data corresponding to the collected signals. The method further includes displaying the user's weight on the user display and outputting, using the output circuit, user data from the scale for reception by external circuitry. The external circuitry receives the user data, identifies a risk that the user has a condition based on reference information and the user data. The external circuitry further outputs generic health information correlating to the condition to the scale that is tailored based on the identified risk.

In various embodiments, the external circuitry receives user data from a plurality of users. The user data output by each respective scale is secured by removing identification data and, optionally, encrypting an identifier that indicates identification of the scale and the user. The external circuitry can combine the various user data received into a user-specific knowledge database, which is updated over time responsive to additional data from the scales. The reference information can include the user-specific knowledge database and various additional health information that the user data is compared to in order to identify the risk for a condition. In response to the user data matching similar patterns of another user's user data, and which the other user has a known condition, the risk calculated is revised. The external circuitry derives and outputs generic health information back to the scale that correlates to the condition but that does not indicate the actual risk that the user has the condition.

In certain embodiments, aspects of the present disclosure are implemented in accordance with and/or in combination with aspects of the underlying PCT Application (Ser. No. PCT/US2016/062505), entitled “Remote Physiologic Parameter Assessment Methods and Platform Apparatuses”, filed on Nov. 17, 2016, PCT Application (Ser. No. PCT/US2016/062484), entitled “Scale-Based Parameter Acquisition Methods and Apparatuses”, filed on Nov. 17, 2016, the U.S. Provisional Application (Ser. No. 62/258,253), entitled “Initialization Method and Devices and User Physiological Platforms”, filed Nov. 20, 2015, U.S. Provisional Application (Ser. No. 62/265,833), entitled “Scale-Based User-Physiological Heuristic Systems”, filed Dec. 10, 2015, and U.S. Provisional Application (Ser. No. 62/266,523), entitled “Social Grouping Using a User-Specific Scale-Based Enterprise System”, filed Dec. 11, 2015”, which are fully incorporated herein by reference.

The above discussion/summary is not intended to describe each embodiment or every implementation of the present disclosure. The figures and detailed description that follow also exemplify various embodiments.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Various example embodiments may be more completely understood in consideration of the following detailed description in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:

FIG. 1A shows a scale-based user-physiological heuristic system consistent with aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 1B shows an example of various communication and feedback provided using a scale-based user-physiological heuristic system consistent with aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 1C shows current paths through the body for the IPG trigger pulse and Foot IPG, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 1D is a flow chart illustrating an example manner in which a user-specific physiologic meter/scale may be programmed to provide features consistent with aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 2A shows an example of the insensitivity to foot placement on scale electrodes with multiple excitation and sensing current paths, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIGS. 2B-2C show examples of electrode configurations, consistent with various aspects of the disclosure;

FIGS. 3A-3B show example block diagrams depicting circuitry for sensing and measuring the cardiovascular time-varying IPG raw signals and steps to obtain a filtered IPG waveform, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 3C depicts an example block diagram of circuitry for operating core circuits and modules, including for example those of FIGS. 3A-3B, used in various specific embodiments of the present disclosure;

FIG. 3D shows an exemplary block diagram depicting the circuitry for interpreting signals received from electrodes;

FIG. 4 shows an example block diagram depicting signal processing steps to obtain fiducial references from the individual Leg IPG “beats,” which are subsequently used to obtain fiducials in the Foot IPG, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 5 shows an example flowchart depicting signal processing to segment individual Foot IPG “beats” to produce an averaged IPG waveform of improved SNR, which is subsequently used to determine the fiducial of the averaged Foot IPG, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 6A shows examples of the Leg IPG signal with fiducials; the segmented Leg IPG into beats; and the ensemble-averaged Leg IPG beat with fiducials and calculated SNR, for an exemplary high-quality recording, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 6B shows examples of the Foot IPG signal with fiducials derived from the Leg IPG fiducials; the segmented Foot IPG into beats; and the ensemble-averaged Foot IPG beat with fiducials and calculated SNR, for an exemplary high-quality recording, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 7A shows examples of the Leg IPG signal with fiducials; the segmented Leg IPG into beats; and the ensemble averaged Leg IPG beat with fiducials and calculated SNR, for an exemplary low-quality recording, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 7B shows examples of the Foot IPG signal with fiducials derived from the Leg IPG fiducials; the segmented Foot IPG into beats; and the ensemble-averaged Foot IPG beat with fiducials and calculated SNR, for an exemplary low-quality recording, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 8 shows an example correlation plot for the reliability in obtaining the low SNR Foot IPG pulse for a 30-second recording, using the first impedance signal as the trigger pulse, from a study including 61 test subjects with various heart rates, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIGS. 9A-9B show an example configuration to obtain the pulse transit time (PTT), using the first IPG as the triggering pulse for the Foot IPG and ballistocardiogram (BCG), consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 10 shows nomenclature and relationships of various cardiovascular timings, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 11 shows an example graph of PTT correlations for two detection methods (white dots) Foot IPG only, and (black dots) Dual-IPG method, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 12 shows an example graph of pulse wave velocity (PWV) obtained from the present disclosure compared to the ages of 61 human test subjects, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 13 shows another example of a scale with interleaved foot electrodes to inject and sense current from one foot to another foot, and within one foot, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 14A shows another example of a scale with interleaved foot electrodes to inject and sense current from one foot to another foot, and measure Foot IPG signals in both feet, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 14B shows another example of a scale with interleaved foot electrodes to inject and sense current from one foot to another foot, and measure Foot IPG signals in both feet, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 14C shows another example approach to floating current sources is the use of transformer-coupled current sources, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIGS. 15A-15D show an example breakdown of a scale with interleaved foot electrodes to inject and sense current from one foot to another foot, and within one foot, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 16 shows an example block diagram of circuit-based building blocks, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 17 shows an example flow diagram, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure;

FIG. 18 shows an example scale communicatively coupled to a wireless device, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure; and

FIGS. 19A-19C show example impedance as measured through different parts of the foot based on the foot position, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure.

While various embodiments discussed herein are amenable to modifications and alternative forms, aspects thereof have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the intention is not to limit the disclosure to the particular embodiments described. On the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the scope of the disclosure including aspects defined in the claims. In addition, the term “example” as used throughout this application is only by way of illustration, and not limitation.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Aspects of the present disclosure are believed to be applicable to a variety of different types of apparatuses, systems, and methods involving identifying risks that a user has a condition based on reference information and scale-based user data, and providing generic information correlating to the condition for the user to view. In certain implementations, aspects of the present disclosure have been shown to be beneficial when used in the context of a weighing scale with electrodes configured for engaging with the user and generating cardio-related physiologic data, such as data indicative of a BCG or ECG of a user. As a more specific embodiment, the scale outputs cardio-related physiologic data to external circuitry, which is an offsite server CPU (e.g., hosted by Amazon or Yahoo), and the external circuitry identifies a risk that the user has a condition based on the cardio-related physiologic data and reference information. The external circuitry outputs generic information correlating to the condition to the scale, the generic information being tailored based on the identified risk. These and other aspects can be implemented to address challenged, including those discussed in the background above. While not necessarily so limited, various aspects may be appreciated through a discussion of examples using such exemplary contexts.

Accordingly, in the following description various specific details are set forth to describe specific examples presented herein. It should be apparent to one skilled in the art, however, that one or more other examples and/or variations of these examples may be practiced without all the specific details given below. In other instances, well known features have not been described in detail so as not to obscure the description of the examples herein. For ease of illustration, the same reference numerals may be used in different diagrams to refer to the same elements or additional instances of the same element. Also, although aspects and features may in some cases be described in individual figures, it will be appreciated that features from one figure or embodiment can be combined with features of another figure or embodiment even though the combination is not explicitly shown or explicitly described as a combination.

Embodiments of the present disclosure are directed to a weighing scale and external circuitry that provide various features including providing user-physiological heuristics to scale users. The weighing collects scale-obtained data including cardio-physiological measurements from a user while the user is standing on the platform of the scale and outputting the scale-obtained data to external circuitry. The external circuitry includes an offsite CPU, such as a server CPU at a datacenter. In various related aspects, the scale secures the scale-obtained data that is communicated by removing data that identifies the user from the user data and adding an encrypted identifier of the scale and the respective user. The external circuitry uses the scale-obtained data by determining and outputting generic health information that is not regulated by a government entity and that is tailored to the user based on the scale-obtained data. The data provided to the user may not regulated by a government entity and the scale can be sold over-the-counter. The external circuitry can provide additional optional features such as determining a risk that user has a condition using the scale-obtained data, providing (e.g., outputting) generic misdiagnosis data in response to an indication that the user has been diagnosed with a condition by a physician, providing user-tailored advertisements using the scale-obtained data, and/or providing an alert in response to the scale-obtained data being indicative of an emergency and/or particular condition of the user. Further, the external circuitry and scale can be used to provide feedback to the system to further refine various conditions and/or risks that the user may have.

In accordance with a number of embodiments, physiological parameter data is collected using an apparatus, such as a weighing scale or other platform that the user stands on. The user (owners of a scale or persons related to the owner, such as co-workers, friends, roommates, colleagues), may use the apparatus in the home, office, doctors office, or other such venue on a regular and frequent basis, the present disclosure is directed to a substantially-enclosed apparatus, as would be a weighing scale, wherein the apparatus includes a platform which is part of a housing or enclosure and a user-display to output user-specific information for the user while the user is standing on the platform. The platform includes a surface area with electrodes that are integrated and configured and arranged for engaging a user as he or she steps onto the platform. Within the housing is processing circuitry that includes a CPU (e.g., one or more computer processor circuits) and a memory circuit with user-corresponding data stored in the memory circuit. The platform, over which the electrodes are integrated, is integrated and communicatively connected with the processing circuitry. The processing circuitry is programmed with modules as a set of integrated circuitry which is configured and arranged for automatically obtaining a plurality of measurement signals (e.g., signals indicative of cardio-physiological measurements) from the plurality of electrodes. The processing circuitry generates, from the signals, cardio-related physiologic data manifested as user data.

The scale, in various embodiments, includes output circuitry that outputs various data to external circuitry. For example, using the output circuitry, the scale outputs user data to external circuitry, such as a smartphone, a smartwatch, a tablet, an external server and/or processor, and/or other circuitry and devices. The external circuitry can perform various additional processing on the user data to determine potential risks for a condition or a condition that the user has. However, in various instances, the condition or risk for a condition can include information that is regulated by a government agency, such as the Food and Drug Agency (FDA). Thereby, the user may be unable to access the information without a prescription from a physician and/or could not purchase the scale in the first place without a prescription if the scale was enabled to provide the prescription (RX) health information. Embodiments in accordance with the present disclosure include processing the user data on external circuitry to determine a potential risk for a condition, which can include Rx health information. In various embodiments, the external circuitry derives and outputs generic health information that is based on the risk for the condition and that does not include RX health information. The user is provided the generic health information that includes suggestions or feedback without being provided with the risk determined for the user. The scale is thereby used to provide suggestions or feedback to the user without diagnosing the user.

The generic health information provided to the user is tailored to the user based on the user data and the determined risk. For example, generic health information includes general information on the condition, potential symptoms, and/or suggestions, such as dietary, exercise and other considerations. The generic health information can be provided based on the severity of the condition (in general or user-specific) and a probability that the user has the condition. The external circuitry may not provide the generic health information, for example, for a condition that has a low severity (e.g., user has an ingrown toe-nail) and/or that the user has a low probability of having the condition (e.g. two percent probability). The user is thus not provided with burdensome amounts of information and/or with information that is not interesting to the user. The user can further set and/or adjust threshold values for the probability and/or the severity.

In various embodiments, user data from a plurality of different scales is combined to identify potential risks for conditions. For example, a plurality of users use different scales and the user data is combined in a user-specific knowledge database. The external circuitry compares the user data to the user-specific knowledge database, which includes other user's user data and conditions they have, to determine the risk. The user-specific knowledge database, in various embodiments, is dynamically updated overtime as more information is learned from different users. For example, the user-specific knowledge database stores data collected from a plurality of users. A first user is known to have a heart condition and has various parameters that are measured and the correlate to symptoms of the heart condition. A second user is not known to have the same heart condition but has similar parameter values as the first user. The external circuitry uses the information of the first user to determine or review a potential risk for the condition for the second user. Furthermore, if the second user is subsequently diagnosed with a different (or same) heart disease than the first user, the user-specific knowledge database is updated with this information. The user-specific knowledge database can be updated with potential risk factors and parameter values associated with a condition in response to additional information from users of the scales.

The user data includes user information that is sensitive to the user (e.g., health data) that the user may not want compromised, accessed by others, and/or otherwise manipulated. Combining and storing the data in a user-specific knowledge database presents a number of data security risks including another person identifying whom the particular users are and health information about the users. Embodiments in accordance with the present disclosure output secure user data from the scale to the external circuitry. To secure the data, the processing circuitry of the scale removes user identifying data from the user data and adds an identifier to the user data so that all data associated with the same user is associated with the same identifier. The identifier, in some embodiments, is encrypted and/or includes an alias identifier (e.g., a tokenization version of the identification of the user and the scale).

In various specific embodiments, the risk for the condition is used as a feedback to the scale. For instance, based on the risk, the scale and external circuitry perform an additional test or measurement, asks the users various questions, and uses the results to verify or adjust the risk for the condition. As a specific example, the scale and/or external circuitry ask if the user has a diagnosis from a doctor, can ask for symptoms, and/or ask questions about family medical history. The answers to the questions can be used by the external circuitry to verify and/or adjust the risk for the condition. Further, the scale can ask the user for a diagnosis from a doctor and compare the diagnosis to the reference information and/or the user specific knowledge database to identify for misdiagnosis (e.g., people whom are diagnosed with condition X, often actually have condition Y). The external circuitry outputs generic misdiagnosis information that does not indicate that the user has been misdiagnosed but rather identifies the general tendency (or percentage if available) of misdiagnosis.

In accordance with various embodiments, the user data is based on sensing, detection, and quantification of at least two simultaneously acquired impedance-based signals. The simultaneously acquired impedance-based signals are associated with quasi-periodic electro-mechanical cardiovascular functions, and simultaneous cardiovascular signals measured by the impedance sensors, due to the beating of an individual's heart, where the measured signals are used to determine at least one cardiovascular related characteristic of the user for determining the heart activity, health, or abnormality associated with the user's cardiovascular system. The sensors can be embedded in a user platform, such as a weighing scale-based platform, where the user stands stationary on the platform, with the user's feet in contact with the platform, where the impedance measurements are obtained where the user is standing with bare feet.

In certain embodiments, the plurality of impedance-measurement signals includes at least two impedance-measurement signals between the one foot and the other location. Further, in certain embodiments, a signal is obtained, based on the timing reference, which is indicative of synchronous information and that corresponds to information in a BCG. Additionally, the methods can include conveying modulated current between selected ones of the electrodes. The plurality of impedance-measurement signals may, for example, be carried out in response to current conveyed between selected ones of the electrodes. Additionally, the methods, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure, include a step of providing an IPG measurement within the one foot. Additionally, in certain embodiments, the two electrodes contacting one foot of the user are configured in an inter-digitated pattern of positions over a base unit that contains circuitry communicatively coupled to the inter-digitated pattern. The circuitry uses the inter-digitated pattern of positions for the step of determining a plurality of pulse characteristic signals based on the plurality of impedance-measurement signals, and for providing an IPG measurement within the one foot. As discussed further herein, and further described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/338,266 filed on Oct. 7, 2015, which is herein fully incorporated by reference for its specific teaching of inter-digitated pattern and general teaching of sensor circuitry, the circuitry can obtain the physiological data in a number of manners.

In medical (and security) applications, for example, the impedance measurements obtained from the plurality of integrated electrodes can then be used to provide various cardio-related information that is user-specific including, as non-limiting examples, synchronous information obtained from the user and that corresponds to information in a ballistocardiogram (BCG) and an impedance plethysmography (IPG) measurements. By ensuring that the user, for whom such data was obtained, matches other bio-metric data as obtained concurrently for the same user, medical (and security) personnel can then assess, diagnose and/or identify with high degrees of confidence and accuracy.

In a number of a specific embodiments, the user stands on the scale. The scale collects signals using the data-procurement circuitry, and sends at least a portion of the signals to the external circuitry. The external circuitry processes the collected signals, sent as user data, and identifies a risk that the user has a condition based on a comparison of the user data with reference information, which may include pooled user data from a plurality of scales. Using the identified risk, the external circuitry can optionally identify various additional information that may be helpful and is obtained by the scale as feedback. The additional information is obtained by performing additional tests using the scale or another user device, and/or asking the user various questions, such as questions related to health history, symptoms experiencing, diagnosis, etc. The user answers the questions, thereby providing additional information about the user to the system. In specific embodiments, the scale include voice input/output circuitry to provide the question and obtain the answers, as further described herein. The additional information is used to verify and/or otherwise adjust the risk for the condition. Based on the identified risk, the external circuitry outputs generic health information correlating to the condition to the scale that is tailored based on the identified risk. The generic health information includes general information about the condition, symptoms, risks factors, and suggestions. The generic health information provided does not include particular risk values for the user and/or any indication that the user has the condition. In this manner, the scale does not provide health information that is prescription information and the scale is provided over-the-counter. The scale, in some embodiments, discerns where to display the generic health information (e.g., on the user display of the scale, a synopsis on the user display with an indication of where additional information is displayed, on a user's smartphone, tablet or other display).

Turning now to the figures, FIG. 1A shows a scale-based user-physiologic system consistent with aspects of the present disclosure. The system includes one or more scales, reference information 111, and user-specific knowledge database 112. Each scale (or one or more of the scales) collects user data that is indicative of cardio-related measurements and outputs the user data to external circuitry. The external circuitry 109 includes the reference information and/or the user-specific knowledge database 112 and/or is in communication with the same. The external circuitry 109, in various embodiments, matches the scale-based user data to risks correlating to one or more physiologic/medical conditions using the reference information 111 and/or the user-specific knowledge database 112, as described in further detail herein. The risk-based data includes a probability that the user has the condition and, in some embodiments, additionally includes a severity of the condition. The severity includes a general severity of the condition (e.g., an ingrown toenail is generally not severe) and/or a user specific severity of the condition (e.g., how severe the condition is for the user and tailored to user data obtained from the user).

Each scale includes a platform 101 and a user display 102. The user, as illustrated by FIG. 1A is standing on the platform 101 of the apparatus. The user display 102 is arranged with the platform 101. As illustrated by the dashed-lines of FIG. 1A, the scale includes processing circuitry 104, data-procurement circuitry 138, and physiologic sensors 108. That is, the dashed-lines illustrate a closer view of components of an example scale. In various embodiments, the user display 102 includes a foot-controlled user interface (FUI), as described in further detail herein.

The physiologic sensors 108, in various embodiments, include a plurality of electrodes and force-sensor circuitry 139 integrated with the platform 101. The electrodes and corresponding force-sensor circuitry 139 are configured to engage the user with electrical signals and to collect signals indicative of the user's identity and cardio-physiological measurements while the user is standing on the platform 101. For example, the signals are indicative of physiological parameters of the user and/or are indicative of or include physiologic data, such as data indicative of a BCG or ECG and/or actual body weight or heart rate data, among other data. Although the embodiment of FIG. 1A illustrates the force sensor circuitry 139 as separate from the physiological sensors 108, one of skill in the art may appreciate that the force sensor circuitry 139 are physiological sensors. Optionally, a user display 102 is arranged with the platform 101 and the electrodes to output user-specific information for the user while the user is standing on the platform 101. The processing circuitry 104 includes CPU and a memory circuit with user-corresponding data 103 stored in the memory circuit. The processing circuitry 104 is arranged under the platform 101 upon which the user stands, and is electrically integrated with the force-sensor circuitry 139 and the plurality of electrodes (e.g., the physiologic sensors 108).

The data indicative of the identity of the user includes, in various embodiments, user-corresponding data, biometric data obtained using the electrodes and/or force sensor circuitry, voice recognition data, images of the user, input from a user's device, and/or a combination thereof and as discussed in further detail herein. The user-corresponding data includes information about the user (that is or is not obtained using the physiologic sensors 108,) such as demographic information or historical information. Example user-corresponding data includes height, gender, age, ethnicity, exercise habits, eating habits, cholesterol levels, previous health conditions or treatments, family medical history, and/or a historical record of variations in one or more of the listed data. The user-corresponding data is obtained directly from the user (e.g., the user inputs to the scale) and/or from another circuit (e.g., a smart device, such a cellular telephone, smart watch and/or fitness device, cloud system, etc.). The user-corresponding data 103 is input and/or received prior to the user standing on the scale and/or in response to.

In various embodiments, the processing circuitry 104 is electrically integrated with the force sensor circuitry 139 and the plurality of electrodes and configured to process data obtained by the data-procurement circuitry 138 while the user is standing on the platform 101. The processing circuitry 104, for example, generates cardio-related physiologic data corresponding to the collected signals and that is manifested as user data. Further, the processing circuitry 104 generates data indicative of the identity of the user, such as a user ID and/or other user identification metadata. The user ID is, for example, in response to confirming identification of the user using the collected signals indicative of the user's identity.

The user data collected by the scale, in some embodiments, includes the raw signals, bodyweight, body mass index, heart rate, body-fat percentage, cardiovascular age, balance, tremors, among other non-regulated physiologic data. The user data collected by the scale can further includes force signals, PWV, weight, heartrate, BCG, balance, tremors, respiration, data indicative of one or more of the proceeding data, and/or a combination thereof. In some embodiments, the user data includes the raw force signals and additional physiologic parameter data is determined using external circuitry. Alternatively, the user data can include physiologic parameters such as the PWV, BCG, IPG, ECG that are determined using signals from the data-procurement circuitry and the external circuitry (or the processing circuitry 104 of the scale) can determine additional physiologic parameters (such as determining the PWV using the BCG) and/or assess the user for a condition or treatment using the physiologic parameter. In various embodiments, the processing circuitry 104, with the user display 102, displays at least a portion of the user data to the user. For example, user data that is not-regulated is displayed to the user, such as user weight. Alternatively and/or in addition, the user data is stored on memory of the scale. For example, the user data is stored on the memory circuit of the processing circuitry (e.g., such as the physiological user-data database 107 illustrated by FIG. 1A). The processing circuitry 104, in various embodiments, correlates the collected user-data (e.g., physiologic user-data) with user-corresponding data, such as storing identification metadata that identifies the user with the respective data. An algorithm to determine the physiologic data from raw signals can be located on the scale, on another device (e.g., external circuitry, cellphone), and on a Cloud system. For example, the Cloud system can learn to optimize the determination and program the scale to subsequently perform the determination locally. The Cloud system can perform the optimization and programming for each user of the scale.

The scale can optionally collect physiologic data from other devices, such as medical devices (implantable or not), user devices, wearable devices, and/or remote-physiological devices. The data can include glucose measurements, blood pressure, ECG or other cardio-related data, body temperature, among other physiologic data. In various embodiments, the user devices can include implantable medical devices and/or other medical devices, such as a pacemaker that securely shares data to the scale. Further, the scale can act as a hub to collect data from a variety of sources. The sources includes the above-noted user devices. The scale can incorporate a web server (URL) that allows secure, remote access to the collected data. For example, the secure access can be used to provide further analysis and/or services to the user. The scale and other device (or external circuitry) can pair and/or otherwise communication in response to a verification or authorization of the communication, which can be based on confirming identification of the other device, and that the same user is using the other device and the scale, and/or a scale-based biometric that is recognized, as further described herein.

In specific embodiments, in response to the user standing on the scale, the scale collects signals indicative of cardio-physiological measurements (e.g., force signals). The processing circuitry 104, processes the signals to generate cardio-related physiologic data manifested as user data and outputs the user data to the external circuitry 109. In various embodiments, the processing includes adding (and later storing) data with a time stamp indicating a time at about when the physiologic parameter data is obtained.

In a number of embodiments, the processing circuitry 104 and/or the scale includes an output circuit 106. The output circuit 106 receives the user data and, in response, sends the user data, including the data indicative of the user's identity and the generated cardio-related physiologic data, from the scale for reception at a remote location (e.g., to external circuitry 109 for assessment). The external circuitry 109 is at a remote location from the scale and is not integrated with the scale. The communication, in various embodiments, includes a wireless communication and/or utilizes a cloud system.

In various embodiments, the output circuit 106 provides data to the user via a user interface. The user interface can be integrated with the platform 101 (e.g., internal to the scale) and/or can be integrated with external circuitry that is not located under the platform 101. In some embodiments, the user interface is a plurality of user interfaces, in which at least one user interface is integrated with the platform 101 and at least one user interface is not integrated with the platform 101.

A user interface includes or refers to interactive components of a device (e.g., the scale) and circuitry configured to allow interaction of a user with the scale (e.g., hardware input/output components, such as a screen, speaker components, keyboard, touchscreen, etc., and circuitry to process the inputs). A user display includes an output surface (e.g., screen) that shows text and/or graphical images as an output from a device to a user (e.g., cathode ray tube, liquid crystal display, light-emitting diode, organic light-emitting diode, gas plasma, touch screens, etc.) For example, output circuit 106 can provide data for display on the user display 102 the user's weight and the data indicative of the user's identity and/or the generated cardio-related physiologic data corresponding the collected signals.

The user interface is or includes a graphical user interface (GUI), a FUI, and/or voice input/output circuitry. The user interface can be integrated with the platform 101 (e.g., internal to the scale) and/or can be integrated with external circuitry that is not located under the platform 101. In some embodiments, the user interface is a plurality of user interfaces, in which at least one user interface is integrated with the platform 101 and at least one user interface is not integrated with the platform 101. Example user interfaces include input/output devices, such as display screens, touch screens, microphones, etc.

A FUI is a user interface that allows for the user to interact with the scale via inputs using their foot and/or via graphic icons or visual indicators near the user's foot while standing on the platform. In specific aspects, the FUI receives inputs from the user's foot (e.g., via the platform) to allow the user to interact with the scale. The user interaction includes the user moving their foot relative to the FUI, the user contacting a specific portion of the user display with their foot, etc. In a specific example, when the user stands on the platform of the scale, and the scale detects touching of the toe, the scale can reject the toe touch (or tap) as a foot signal (e.g., similar to wrist rejection for capacitive tablets with stylus). In some embodiments, the user display includes a touch screen and the user interaction includes the user selecting an icon, an item in a list, a virtual keyboard, among other selections, using a portion of their foot. For example, the FUI can display various tests and/or functions that can be performed and the user can select one of the test or functions by contacting their toe with an icon of the respective test or function. In response to the selection, the scale performs the test or function. Alternatively and/or in addition, the scale is configured with a haptic, capacitive or flexible pressure-sensing upper surface, the (upper surface/tapping) touching from or by the user is sensed in the region of the surface and processed according to conventional X-Y grid Signal processing in the logic circuitry/CPU that is within the scale. By using one or more of the accelerometers located within the scale at its corners, such user data entry is sensed by each such accelerometer so long as the user's toe, heel or foot pressure associated with each tap provides sufficient force. In some embodiments, the user display is integrated with motion sense circuitry. The user interaction, in such embodiments, include the user moving their foot (with or without touching the user display). In various embodiments, the control of the FUI can be provided to a separate user device, such a user device that has previously been or is paired with the scale and that is detected by the scale. As a specific example, the scale provides a cellphone with control functions to control the display of the FUI in response to detecting the cellphone is within a threshold distance. In a specific example, when the user stands on the platform of the scale, and the scale detects touching of the toe, the scale can reject the toe touch (or tap) as a foot signal (e.g., similar to wrist rejection for capacitive tablets with stylus).

A GUI is a user interface that allows the user to interact with the scale through graphical icons and visual indicators. As an example, the external circuitry includes a GUI, processing circuitry, and output circuitry to communicate with the processing circuitry of the scale. The communication can include a wireless or wired communication. Example external circuitry can include a wired or wireless tablet, a cellphone (e.g., with an application), a smartwatch or fitness band, smartglasses, a laptop computer, among other devices. In other examples, the scale includes a GUI and voice input/output circuitry (as further described below) integrated in the platform 101. The user interact with the scale via graphical icons and visual indicators provided via the GUI and voice commands from the user to the scale.

Voice input/output circuitry (also sometimes referred to as speech input/output) can include a speaker, a microphone, processing circuitry, and other optional circuitry. The speaker outputs computer-generated speech (e.g., synthetic speech, instructions, messages) and/or other sounds (e.g., alerts, noise, recordings, etc.) The computer-generated speech can be predetermined, such as recorded messages, and/or can be based on a text-to-speech synthesis that generates speech from computer data. The microphone captures audio, such a voice commands from the user and produces a computer-readable signal from the audio. For example, the voice input/output circuitry can include an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) that translates the analog waves captured by the microphone (from voice sounds) to digital data. The digital data can be filtered using filter circuitry to remove unwanted noise and/or normalize the captured audio. The processing circuitry (which can include or be a component of the processing circuitry 104) translates the digital data to computer commands using various speech recognition techniques (e.g., pattern matching, pattern and feature matching, language modeling and statistical analysis, and artificial neural networks, among other techniques).

The external circuitry 109 receives the user data and perform various analysis, in various embodiments. The external circuitry includes a processing circuitry, output circuitry, and a memory circuit that optionally includes reference information. The reference information 111 includes data and statistics of a variety of conditions, symptoms, parameters values indicative of conditions, assessment data of people experiencing the condition, government provided health information and/or databases, and a combination thereof. The reference information is stored in a structured database and/or in an unstructured database. In some embodiments, the reference information includes the user-specific knowledge database 112. The user-specific knowledge database 112 includes pooled user data from a plurality of scales that is updated over time. Data from the scales is pooled in the user-specific knowledge database 112 and, in some embodiments, is used to identify trends, risks, and/or parameter values associated with and/or indicative of particular conditions.

The external circuitry 109 receives the user data and identifies a risk that the user has a condition using the reference information 111 and the user data provided by the scale. The risk is identified by comparing the user data to the reference information 111 (and/or the user-specific knowledge database 112) and identifying a match. The risk of a condition, as previously discussed, includes a probability that the user has the condition and a severity of the condition.

In response to identifying the risk, the external circuitry 109 derives and/or identifies and outputs generic health information correlating to the condition to the scale.

The generic health information is tailored to the user based on the identified risk. As previously discussed, the generic health information includes information on risk factors for the condition, symptoms of the condition, and suggestions. The generic health information does not indicate that the user has the condition or the risk of the condition identified, in a number of embodiments. In various embodiments, the generic health information includes advertisements, such as advertisements for physician specializing in the condition, prescription medication, health groups, etc.

The generic health information can be output to the scale based on multiple thresholds. For example, the external circuitry 109 outputs the generic health information to the scale in response to the probability of the user having the risk that is greater than a first threshold and the severity of the condition that is greater than a second threshold. In some embodiments, the threshold is that the probability is greater than a threshold and does not include the severity being greater than a second threshold. Further, the user can adjust the thresholds to tailor the information provided based on their needs and/or amount of information that they would like to receive. Alternatively and/or in addition, the generic health information is output to another user device. For example, the scale enables the output to other user device in response to a verified scale-based biometric that authorizes the communication, as discussed in further detail herein.

As used herein, a user device includes processing circuitry and output circuitry to collect various data (e.g., signals) and communicate the data to the scale and/or other circuitry. Example user devices include cellphones, tablets, standalone servers, among other devices. A wearable device is a user device (and/or a remote user-physiologic device) that is worn by a user, such as on a user's wrist, head, or chest. Example wearable devices include smartwatches and fitness bands, smartglasses, chest heart monitors, etc. A remote user-physiologic device is a user device (and/or a wearable device) that further includes sensor circuitry or other circuit to collect physiologic data from the user, and, can optionally be in secured communication with the scale or other circuitry. Example remote user-physiological devices include smartwatches or fitness bands that collect heart rate and/or ECG and/or body temperature, medical devices, implanted medical devices, smartbeds, among other devices. Example physiologic data collected by remote user-physiologic devices includes glucose measurements, blood pressure, ECG or other cardio-related data, body temperature, among other data. As used herein, the terms “user device”, “wearable device”, and “remote user-physiologic device” can be interchangeably used, as one of skill may appreciate that in specific examples, a particular device may be considered one or more of a user device, a wearable device, a remote user-physiologic device. As a specific example, a particular remote user-physiologic device is a smartwatch and can be referred to as a wearable device or a user device. In other aspects, the remote user physiologic device may not be a wearable device, such as a medical device that is periodically or temporarily used.

In various embodiments, the scale and/or other user device is used as feedback in response to the identified risk. For example, the external circuitry 109, in response to the identified risk, determines questions to ask the user and/or additional tests to perform and outputs the number of questions to the scale to ask the user and/or the additional tests to perform. The questions include asking if the user has a diagnosis from a doctor, asking if the user is experiencing particular symptoms, and asking the user for family medical information. The scale, using the processing circuitry 104 and the user display 102, provides the number of questions to the user (including asking if the user has a symptom occurring). The scale outputs the response to the questions (e.g., the answers as input to the scale by the users) to the external circuitry 109 and the external circuitry 109 verifies and/or adjusts the risk using the responses to the questions. For example, in various embodiments, a user may not realize they are experiencing a symptom (e.g., heart rate is raised and/or difficulty breathing). The questions ask the user about potential symptoms of the condition identified (e.g., associated with the risk) and is used to revised the risk determined. The user is provided with generic health information about the condition that may include the various symptoms to assist the user in recognizing the symptoms and discussing the same with their physician. Alternatively and/or in addition, the scale can prompt the user to perform additional tests, such as breath hold, valsalva, etc.

In a number of embodiments, the scale asks the user about diagnosis from a physician. For example, the user may have been diagnosed with heart failure and the user inputs this knowledge to the scale. The scale outputs the response to the external circuitry and the external circuitry 109 identifies misdiagnosis information associated with the condition. For example, in some instances, when a user is diagnosed with condition Y, they actually have condition X. The external circuitry determines and outputs generic misdiagnosis information to the scale. The generic misdiagnosis information includes or refers to rates of misdiagnosis for the condition the user is diagnosed with and potential other conditions or causes of the misdiagnosis. The misdiagnosis information may not identify or state that the user is misdiagnosed or at risks for misdiagnosis but rather provides general statistics and identification of the causes of the misdiagnosis. The misdiagnosis information can be based on historical data, clinical data, and/or pooled scaled-data from a plurality of scales.

The scale can be used to provide questions to the user and obtain answers from the user. In accordance with a number of embodiments, the scale performs a question and answer session. For example, the FUI can display a plurality of questions using the user display. Using user interaction by the user's foot, the FUI receives user inputs (e.g., answers) to each of the questions and, using the output circuit, stores the user inputs within a user profile associated with the user. For example, the FUI provides a number of questions in a question and answer session to identify symptoms, diagnosis, lifestyle data, family medical history, among other questions. As previously described, the scale can (alternatively and/or in addition to a FUI or GUI) have a voice input/output circuitry that can obtain user's answers to questions via voice comments and inputs user information in response (e.g., a speaker component to capture voice sounds from the user and processing circuitry to recognize the voice commands and/or speech).

In other related embodiments, the external circuitry 109, in response to the identified risk, determines additional tests or measurements to be performed. The scale can be used to perform the additional test and/or other circuitry is used. For example, the external circuitry 109 determines and outputs a test, to the scale, for the scale to perform. The scale, including the data-procurement circuitry, performs the test and outputs results to the external circuitry 109. Using the results, the external circuitry 109 verifies and/or adjusts the risk. Furthermore, the user data and/or results from the test are used to update the user-specific knowledge database 112. Alternatively and/or in addition, the external circuitry 109 determines an additional user device to perform the test. The external circuitry 109 provides an advertisement for the additional user device to the scale to display to the user via the user interface (e.g., FUI, GUI, and/or external GUI).

Although the present examples embodiments provided above are in reference to external circuitry 109 performing the determination, embodiments in accordance with the present disclosure are not so limited. For example, the processing circuitry 104 of the scale can determine the risk by accessing the reference information 111 or the feedback information while the user is standing on the platform 101.

In accordance with various embodiments, although not illustrated by FIG. 1A, the system includes an additional sensor circuitry that is external to the scale. The additional sensor circuitry can include a communication circuit and is configured and arranged to engage the user with electrical signals and collect therefrom signals indicative of an ECG of the user. The sensor circuitry, which may include and/or be correlated with processing circuitry configured to derive an ECG from the collected signals. The sensor circuitry communicates the ECG to the external circuitry 111 and the scale can communicate a BCG to the external circuitry 111.

In various specific embodiments, in response to the user standing on and/or approaching the scale, the scale obtains identification data to identify the user. Example identification data, as discuss further herein with regard to FIG. 2A, includes the time of day, length of foot, shape of foot, toe print, toe-tapped password, spoken words from the user, weight, height, facial features, etc. The apparatus, using the processing circuitry 104, confirms identification of the user when the user is standing on the platform and/or as the user approaches the platform. The identification, in various embodiments, is based on the identification data and/or user data. For example, the processing circuitry 104 compares the identification data to stored user-corresponding data 103 to confirm identification of the user. Further, in some embodiments, additional user-corresponding data is obtained in response to the user standing on and/or approaching the platform. The scale, in a number of embodiments, is configured to collect user data for two or more users. Among the examples discussed below, in certain embodiments the scale is designed to access scale-obtained bio-metric data (e.g., foot shape, toe print, expected heartrate of the user at a certain time of day, an ECG-to-BCG timing relationship, and wave shapes of the user's cardiograph such as QRS complex, range of beat-to-beat fluctuation, etc.). Exemplary embodiments of the scale are designed to use the bio-metric/identification data to distinguish (or sufficiently identify) users who stand on or approach the scale and, in response, the scale correlates scale-obtained data with a user profile corresponding to the identified user.

In a number of embodiments, the external circuitry 109 determines additional physiologic parameters and/or data, such as further clinical indications, of the user using the determined physiologic parameter. For example, the determined physiologic parameter can include an ECG and the external circuitry 109 can determine a BCG using the ECG. Alternatively and/or in addition, the external circuitry 109 can determine a health status of the user using the determined physiologic parameter, such as a condition or treatment.

FIG. 1B shows an example of various communication and feedback provided using a scale-based user-physiological heuristic system consistent with aspects of the present disclosure. Although the embodiment of FIG. 1B (and FIG. 1A) illustrates one scale, the scale-based user-physiologic heuristic system includes a plurality of scales in communication with external circuitry. The external circuitry includes processing circuitry and a memory circuit. In various embodiments, the memory circuit of the external circuitry stores various reference information 111. In other embodiments, the reference information 111 is external to the external circuitry and the external circuitry accesses the various reference information 111. Each scale is configured to monitor signals and/or data indicative of physiologic parameters of the user while the user is standing on the platform 101 and communicate the signals and/or data to the external circuitry. Further, the user data is pooled in a user-specific knowledge database 112, which the external circuitry accesses.

As discussed above, a scale in various embodiments includes a platform 101, a user display 102, processing circuitry include a plurality of electrodes, and output circuitry. The output circuitry is configured and arranged to send user data to the external circuitry for assessment at a remote location. The external circuitry is not integrated within the scale. The scale communicates user data wirelessly (and/or via a cloud system) to and from the external circuitry. For example, the scale can communicate user-corresponding data, scale-obtained cardio data, demographic data, and/or other data (e.g., data for studies). Using the user data from the scale, the external circuitry compares the user data to the various reference information 111 to identify one or more risks that the user has a condition. In response to a match, the external circuitry identifies a risk and outputs generic health information to the scale that is based on the identified risk. Example generic health information includes risk factors, symptoms, and suggestions.

In various embodiments, the reference information 111 includes statistical data of a sample census pertinent to the categories of interest and the at least one physiological parameter. The statistical data of a sample census includes data of other users that are correlated to condition. In such instances, the risks identification includes a comparison of data measured while the user is standing on the platform to sample census data (e.g., may contain Rx information).

The user data, in some embodiments, stored in the user-specific knowledge database 112 includes secure data. For example, processing circuitry of each scale outputs the secure user data to the output circuit of the scale. The secure data include user data with removed identification data and, optionally, at least portions of the user data are encrypted. In various embodiments, an identifier is added to the user data so that user data associated with a particular user and the scale and is identified using the identifier. The identifier is, optionally, encrypted by the scale prior to sending the user data. The external circuitry replaces the identifier with an alias ID. The user data with the alias ID is stored on the user-specific knowledge database 112 and the identification of which alias ID corresponds to which user and scale is stored on a separate database for additional security.

In various embodiments, the external circuitry provides additional feedback information to the scale. For example, in response to the identified risk, an additional test to perform is identified by the external circuitry for the scale (or another user device) to perform. In some embodiments, the scale performs the additional test and outputs the results to the external circuitry. Using the results, the external circuitry revises and/or verifies the identified risk. Alternatively and/or in addition, in response to the identified risk, the external circuitry provides a number of questions to the scale to provide the user. The questions include questions to determine symptoms the user is having, medical history, diagnosis information, etc. For example, the scale can provide the questions to the user and output the responses back to the external circuitry. Using the responses, the external circuitry verifies and/or adjusts the risk identified.

In accordance with various embodiments, the external circuitry updates a user-specific knowledge database 112 using various user information. The external circuitry and/or the scale updates the user-specific knowledge database 112 with the user data, the test results, and the responses to the questions. For example, the responses to the questions may identify a diagnosis the user has from a doctor and/or additional symptoms the user is experiencing. This information is used to dynamically update the user-specific knowledge database 112 and potentially revise (e.g., increase or decreases) risks identified by the external circuitry. For example, the external circuitry validates the received user data/user information as corresponding to a particular user associated with an alias ID and correlates the received user data with other user data stored in the user-specific knowledge database 112 and associated with the alias ID. The external circuitry then updates the user-specific knowledge database 112 with the user data and/or other feedback data obtained.

For example, in a number of embodiments, the scale including the processing circuitry provides a number of questions to the user in response to input from the external circuitry. The questions can be provided via a speaker component of the scale outputting computer-generated natural voice (via a natural language interface), displaying the questions on the user display 102, and/or outputting the questions to another user-device. The scale provides the input to the external circuitry and the external circuitry verifies or revises the risk identified. Further, the external circuitry updates the user-specific knowledge database 112. As previously described, the scale can (alternatively and/or in addition to a FUI or GUI) have a voice input/output circuitry that can obtain user's answers to questions via voice comments and inputs user information in response (e.g., a speaker component to capture voice sounds from the user and processing circuitry to recognize the voice commands and/or speech).

In accordance with the present disclosure, a risk of a user for a condition is identified and/or adjusted based on demographics of the user, disorders, disease, symptoms, prescription or non-prescription drugs, treatments, past medical history, family medical history, genetics, life style (e.g., exercise habits, eating habits, work environment), among other categories and combinations thereof In a number of embodiments, the scale is designed to obtain physiological factor(s) of a particular user of the scale wherefrom the scale helps to identify/diagnose/prescribe a disease and/or disorder correlating to the physiological factor(s) and/or to other user-specific attributes. For example, an increase in weight, along with other factors, can indicate an increased risk of atrial fibrillation and particularly for certain types of demographics (e.g., obese women over the age of 70 and with a history of anxiety). As the scale is designed to assess and track the body weight the user and the scale includes or has access to a memory circuit (database) with the user's demographics/physiological profile (e.g., age, weight, diet, medications, activities, pharmaceutical prescriptions, etc.), the scale is also designed to obtain cardio-based physiological factors of the user and to use these cardio-based physiological factors as an automated research tool to assess risks and data indicative of the user having or being prone to have identifiable diseases and/or disorders correlating to these physiological factors. In various embodiments, the user data is compared against historical user data for the same user and used to analyze if the user's condition/treatment and risk is getting better or worse over time.

In some instances, symptoms of a particular disorder can be different for different categories of interest (e.g., symptoms of atrial fibrillation can be different between men and women). For example, in women, systolic blood pressure can be more-so associated with atrial fibrillation. In other instances, sleep apnea may be assessed via an ECG and is correlated to weight of the user and the user's restlessness at night. Various cardiac (other) conditions can be assessed using an ECG including, for example, atrial fibrillation being characterized and/or identified in response to a user having partially-discernible or fibrillating P-waves, partially-shaped QRS complexes, and grossly inconsistent beat-to-beat fluctuations. Atrial flutter, by contrast, can be characterized by having no p-wave, variable heart rate, having QRS complexes, and a generally regular rhythm. Ventricular tachycardia (VT) can be characterized by a rate of greater than 120 beats per minute, and short or broad QRS complexes (depending on the type of VT). Atrio-Ventricular (AV) block can be characterized by PR intervals that are greater than normal (e.g., a normal range for an adult is generally 0.12 to 0.20 seconds), normal-waves, QRS complexes can be normal or prolong shaped, and the pulse can be regular (but slow at 20-40 beats per minute). For more specific and general information regarding atrial fibrillation and sleep apnea, reference may be made to clevelandclinicmeded.com/medicalpubs/diseasemanagement/cardiology/atrial-fibrillation/ and circ.ahajournals.org/content/118/10/1080.full (each being fully incorporated herein for these specific and their general teachings). Further, other data and demographics that are known and/or are developed can be added and used to derive the various reference information. Embodiments of the scale are designed, with software programming, to act as the above-characterized automated research tool to assess risks and data indicative of the user-specific physiological factors which correlated to such identifiable diseases and/or disorders.

Information associated with or resulting from these automated scale-prompted activities, is made available to the user of the scale and, as may be permitted by or on behalf of the user, is selectively shared with other user-specified individuals or entities. Accordingly to various exemplary embodiments, the scale is designed to use and provide such information based on how the user has configured and/or has already used the scale. As discussed above, the scale may be used for obtaining such generic health information that would be specific to the user and this may include life-style suggestions based on the user's scale-obtained physiological parameters and/or stored user-profile data, suggested user-specific prescription medicine and/or reasons on why should be prescribed, and/or other advice such as symptoms for which the user has been, or should be, on the lookout. For instance, the user data may suggest that the user has a heart condition and/or disorder. The scale efforts (and/or the scale's display) may suggest generic health information suggests prescription medicine to the user to ask their physician about and/or provides potential symptoms that the user should watch for and/or should go to the physician's office or an emergency room if such symptoms were to arise.

In accordance with various other related embodiments, the feedback provided to the user includes advertisements for various tools, resources, medications, and/or devices. For example, in response to identifying the user is at risk for developing pneumonia, an advertisement for decongestants and/or other medications is displayed to the user. Further, in response to the user being at risk for atrial fibrillation, an advertisement for a health facility (e.g., gym), a physician specializing in heart issues, and/or weight loss program is displayed to the user. Further, the advertisements provided to the user, in some embodiments, are correlated to the risk and/or input user goals. For example, the user may be training for a marathon and the scale identifies that the user is at risk for athletic asthma. The user is then provided an advertisement for a prescription medication for athletic asthma that is tailored to athletes, training programs for marathons, that may specialize in athletes with asthma, and/or devices that track progress in training and/or track the asthma for the user (e.g., Fitbit or other user device), among other advertisements. Example advertisements include physicians specializing in conditions, devices used to track progress in training, weight loss and/or symptoms, programs to assist with training and/or other health issues (e.g., gyms, weight loss programs, training programs), prescription medication, non-prescription medication, exercise equipment, food delivery services, and/or research programs, among other advertisements.

The advertisement provided can be tied to the risk or the condition, are based on user inputs, correlate to user goals, and/or correlated to demographic information of the user, or a combination thereof. For example, based on the user data obtained, the external circuitry identifies that the user is at risk for a heart disease. The user has provided inputs to the scale indicating that the user is training for a marathon and that the user is over fifty years old. The external circuitry identifies the risk and identifies a prescription medication associated with the heart disease that is targeted for athletes and/or people over fifty years old. The external circuitry outputs the advertisement to the scale for display to the user.

The scale can receive the advertisement (or other generic health information) and discerns where and/or how to display the advertisement. For instance, the scale includes a user display (e.g., a FUI) that has limited space. Based on the amount of data, the height of the user, and/or past user responses, the scale discerns whether to display the advertisement on the scale or output the advertisement to another user device. For example, the scale displays a synopsis, a subset of the total data, and/or an indication of an advertisement on the user display of the scale which includes an icon for the user to select to view more information. In response to the user selecting the icon, the scale outputs the advertisement to another user device, such as the user's smartphone and/or displays the advertisement on the user display. Alternatively, in response to the user selecting the icon, the scale displays another one or more icons for the user to select which device to display the advertisement on. Based on the user inputs, the scale automatically displays subsequent feedback, generic health information, and/or advertisements based on how the user responds in the past and/or over time. For example, if the user continuously displays the advertisement on their smart phone, the scale outputs the advertisement to the user's smartphone. By contrast, if the user does not indicate an interest in particular advertisements, the scale does not display the advertisements. The scale displays or outputs the generic health information and/or advertisements in response to verifying a scale-based biometric, in various embodiments.

Biometrics, as used herein, are metrics related to human characteristics and used as a form of identification and access control. Scale-based biometrics includes biometrics that are obtained using signals collected by the data-procurement circuitry of the scale (e.g., using electrodes and/or force sensors). Example scale-based biometrics include foot length, foot width, weight, voice recognition, facial recognition, a passcode tapped and/or picture drawn with a foot of the user on the FUI/GUI of the user display, among other biometrics. In some specific embodiments, a scale-based biometric includes a toe-print (e.g., similar to a finger print) that is recognized using a toe-print reader on the FUI/GUI of the scale. The toe print can be used as a secure identification of the user. In other embodiments, the scale-based biometric includes a finger print captured using a user device in communication with the scale (e.g., a cellphone or tablet having finger print recognition technology).

In various embodiments, user devices provide authorization data to the scale to authorize communication between the devices. Example authorization data includes data selected from the group consisting of a password, a passcode, a biometric, a cellphone ID, and a combination thereof. A user device-based biometric, in various embodiments, includes biometrics selected from the group consisting of: a finger print, voice recognition, facial recognition, DNA, iris recognition, typing rhythm, and a combination thereof, in various embodiments. Responsive to collecting the authorization data and/or verifying the authorization data as corresponding to the user, the user device outputs the authorization data to the scale. The authorization data is collected, in various embodiments, prior to, during, and/or after, the scale collects various signals. The scale can authorize communication of user data between the scale and the user device in response to verifying that the user data corresponds to the same user as is standing on the scale (e.g., based on a scale-based biometric and data in storage). In some specific embodiments, a wearable device, such as a ring, wristband, and/or ankle bracelet can be used to positively identify a user, with or without biometrics.

In various embodiments, the system includes additional scales than illustrated by FIG. 1A or 1B. For example, the external circuitry receives user data from a plurality of scales located at a variety of locations. The user data, in various embodiments, is automatically sent from the scales to the external circuitry. The external circuitry is configured to identify risk for various users using the data from the plurality of scales, output generic health information, and updated the user-specific knowledge database. In various embodiments, the external circuitry includes computer-readable instructions executed to perform the various functions.

For example, the external circuitry receives the user data that corresponds to the plurality users from the plurality of scales. The respective user data is received at over-lapping times and/or separate times. In response to receiving the user data, the external circuitry, in various embodiments, identifies the respective plurality of users based on the identifiers and/or other identifying data and, correlates the received user data with profiles of the respective plurality of users based alias IDs corresponding to the user associated with the identifier. Each alias ID identifies that the user data corresponds to a particular user (e.g., and previously stored data corresponding to that particular user) but does not provide an identity of the user. In a number of embodiments, the external circuitry identifies (e.g., determines) risks for each of the users for having conditions by comparing the user data with reference information 111. The external circuitry outputs the generic health information to the scales that is tailored to each respective user based on the risk for the condition. The external circuitry further instructs the scales to collect feedback data, including symptoms experiences, demographic information, medical history information etc., and uses the feedback data to revise and/or verify the risk. In some embodiments, the feedback data and the user data is used to update a user-specific knowledge database 112, which is used to refine the identified risks for other users.

As such, and in accordance with various embodiments, the one or more scales have the capability to send raw force signals using wireless communications and/or over the Internet. The raw force signals are sent to the external circuitry, which may be an online database, where advanced processing is performed using processing resources that may be more powerful than the scale. The external circuitry processes the force signals to determine physiological parameters and/or risks for the user having a condition. Generic health information that is tailored to the user and based on the risk is derived and output back to the scale. The external circuitry and/or online database/site can track user data for a plurality of users and from a plurality of scales and correlates the user data and feedback data with various conditions in a user-specific knowledge database 112. The correlation are used to further refine the identification of risks for other users and/or for subsequent identifications.

The scale can be used by multiple different users. A subset or each of the different users can have data output to external circuitry and can receive generic health information in response to an identified risk for a condition. The scale and/or external circuitry can store the user data and identify the one or more risks based on reference information. Based on the risk and tailored specifically to the respective user, the external circuitry generates and outputs generic health information to the scale. In response, the scale provides the user access to the generic health information. The scale and/or external circuitry can selectively track particular data and obtain additional data to the user to refine the risk and generate updated generic health information. In some embodiments, the scale and/or external circuitry generate the generic health information with or without user interest. For example, the external circuitry generates the generic health information and outputs to the scale without the user indicating an interest. The scale can querying the user to indicate availability of the generic health information and to obtain a user input to activate a service for access to the generic health information. The user may not be provided with the generic health information until the user provides a user input indicating interest in the data and/or otherwise activates a corresponding service.

As described in the above-provided examples, the generic health information can be provided as a service and/or calculated and stored until the service is activated. In some embodiments, the user may never access the data and stops using the scale (e.g., deactivates an account). In other embodiments, the user deactivates the particular service (e.g., stops providing the weighted value that activates the service) that provides access to the generic health information. The scale and/or external circuitry, in such embodiments, may store the user data, including the risk, generic health information, and subsequently tracked data, with or without user identifying information for future use (e.g., retains previous processed data and can provide to other people or the user for weighted values). For example, the external circuitry may provide user data for research purposes (while removing user identifying information) and/or the user may subsequently re-activate the service or obtain another scale. In the event that a user deactivates a service, the scale may periodically provide a reminder to the user of the availability of generic health information, such as by outputting an email message, a text message to a cellphone, and/or displaying a messaged on a user interface of the scale.

The scale can be used in different setting and/or modes, such as a consumer mode, a professional mode, and a combination mode. A consumer mode includes a scale as used and/or operated in a consumer setting, such as a dwelling. As a specific example, a scale is located in a dwelling with five different people. Each of the five different people use the scale, and two of the five people have previously provided inputs to the scale that indicate an interest in generic health information. Prior to providing the generic health information to a user, the identity of the respective user is verified via the scale using a scale-based biometric. Responsive to identifying the user, the scale identifies the user has indicated interest in the generic health information (e.g., activates a service) and outputs all or portions of the data to the external circuitry.

As a specific example, a first user has previously identified an interest in the generic health information and, when the user stands on the scale, the scale identifies the first user using a scale-based biometric. The scale provides the first user with the generic health information, such as by displaying the data on the user interface of the scale or outputting to another user device. A second user stands on the scale (that has previously identified generic health information and tracking of data for diagnosis purposes (e.g., with a prescription from a physician) for the second user) and, responsive to identifying the second user using a scale-based biometric, the scale provides the generic health information and provides potential prescription data responsive to a prescription from a physician. The scale, in some embodiments, outputs a request to the external circuitry for the prescription and the external circuitry may output a response on an estimated time for receiving the prescription and/or the availability or unavailability of the prescription at that time. The scale provides an indication of the estimated time and/or unavailability of access to the prescription level data responsive to not receiving the prescription. In response to receiving the prescription from the external circuitry, the scale provides the user with access to the prescription level data. A third (or more) user that has not yet provided an indication of an interest stands on the scale. In response, the scale recognizes (or not) the third user, the scale provides the third user with the reminder of the availability of generic health information and prompts the user to input an interest in the same. As users in a consumer mode may be familiar with one another (e.g., live together), the identification of the user by the scale can be based on weight, body-mass-index, and/or other data. Although embodiments are not so limited and the identification can be based on other biometrics and/or passcodes.

In other instances, the scale is used in a professional setting, such as a medical office, and/or in a professional mode. A professional mode includes an operation of the scale as used and/or operated in a professional setting, such as a doctor's office, exercise facility, nursing home, etc. In a professional mode, the scale is used by different users that may not be familiar with one another. The different users may have services with the professional to track and/or aggregate data from a peripheral device and/or to provide health information. A peripheral device includes or refers to circuitry that is not integrated within the scale and can communicate with the scale via a wired or wireless connection. In some instances, a user can be provided with additional health information as service while waiting for the professional, such as while waiting to see a doctor. The scale receives the generic health information and/or clinical indication from the external circuitry and either displays the generic health information using a user interface of the scale and/or via direct communication (e.g., WiFi, Bluetooth, NFC) with a user device (e.g., cellphone, tablet) that is within a threshold distance of the scale. Similar to the consumer mode, the scale can selectively provide the services by verifying the identity of the user using a scale-based biometric. The identification can include a higher-level biometric and/or identification than the consumer mode.

As a specific professional mode example, a scale is located at a doctor's office and is used to obtain data from multiple patients (e.g., 10 in a day, 500 in a year). When a patient checks-in, they stand on the scale and the scale-obtained data is output to external circuitry for document retention and/or other purposes. A subset (or all) of the patients have activated a service with doctor that corresponds with and/or includes providing generic health information while the user is waiting and/or based on categories of interest. For example, a user is diagnosed by the physician with atrial fibrillation (AFIB) at a prior time and the physician provides a prescription to review specific data about AFIB, which the scale outputs to external circuitry along with user data obtained by the scale. The external circuitry generates generic health information correlated with AFIB and the user data. For example, the generic health information includes various risks factors for AFIB and identifies lifestyle changes specific to the user that can reduce the risk factors. The external circuitry communicates the generic health information to the scale via an Internet (or direct communication) connection and the scale outputs generic health information to a cellphone of the user via an NFC or Bluetooth communication. The scale, in the professional mode, may be used to obtain data from more users than a scale used in a consumer setting.

The scale can also be in a combination consumer/professional mode. A combination consumer/professional mode includes a scale as used and/or operated in a consumer setting for purposes and/or uses by a professional, and/or in a professional setting for purposes and/or uses by the consumer (e.g., use by the consumer outside of the professional setting and/or in addition to). As a specific example, a scale is located at a user's dwelling and used by multiple family members. A first user of the family is diagnosed with a heart-related condition and the doctor may offer a service to review data from the scale (and optionally another user device) of the first user. When the other family members stand on the scale, the scale operates in the consumer mode. The other family members may or may not have the service activated for the doctor to review data and the scale operates via the consumer mode. When the first user that is diagnosed with heart-related condition stands on the scale, the scale recognizes the user and operates in a professional mode or a combination mode. For example, the scale outputs aggregated data from the scale to external circuitry that is accessible by the doctor of the first user.

Data provided to the user and/or the professional can default to be displayed on the user interface of the scale, the GUI of the user device, and/or a GUI of other external circuitry depending on the use of the scale. In a consumer mode and/or combination consumer/professional mode, data can default to display on the user interface of the scale. The defaulted display of data can be revised by the user providing inputs to display the data on the GUI of a user device or a GUI of another external circuitry (e.g., a standalone CPU) and/or automatically by the scale based on past scale-based actions of the user. As a specific example, a first user provides a user input to the scale to display data on the GUI of the user device multiple times (e.g., more than a threshold number of times, such as five times). In response, the scale adjusts the defaulted display and outputs data to the GUI of the user device. The display on the user interface of the scale and/or GUI of the user device (or other external circuitry) can include an indication of available generic health information and/or the generic health information, among other displays. In a professional mode, the scale is not owned by the user. The user may be uninterested in synchronizing their user device with the professional's scale. The display may default to the GUI of the user device to display an option to synchronize, and/or to override the synchrony. Alternatively, the display may default to the user interface of the scale to display an option to synchronize and, responsive to user verification or authority to synchronize, defaults to display on the GUI of the user device. During the combination consumer/professional mode, portions of scale-obtained data for a particular user may default to display on external circuitry, such as a standalone or server CPU that is accessible by the professional.

The remaining figures illustrate various ways to collect the physiologic data from the user, electrode configurations, and alternative modes of the processing circuitry 104. For general and specific information regarding the collection of physiologic data, electrode configurations, and alternative modes, reference is made to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/338,266 filed on Oct. 7, 2015, which is hereby fully incorporated by references for its teachings.

FIG. 1C shows current paths 100 through the body of a user 105 standing on a scale 110 for the IPG trigger pulse and Foot IPG, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure. Impedance measurements 115 are measured when the user 105 is standing and wearing coverings over the feet (e.g., socks or shoes), within the practical limitations of capacitive-based impedance sensing, with energy limits considered safe for human use. The measurements 115 can be made with non-clothing material placed between the user's bare feet and contact electrodes, such as thin films or sheets of plastic, glass, paper or wax paper, whereby the electrodes operate within energy limits considered safe for human use. The IPG measurements can be sensed in the presence of callouses on the user's feet that normally diminish the quality of the signal.

As shown in FIG. 1C, the user 105 is standing on a scale 110, where the tissues of the user's body will be modeled as a series of impedance elements, and where the time-varying impedance elements change in response to cardiovascular and non-cardiovascular movements of the user. ECG and IPG measurements sensed through the feet can be challenging to take due to small impedance signals with (1) low SNR, and because they are (2) frequently masked or distorted by other electrical activity in the body such as the muscle firings in the legs to maintain balance. The human body is unsteady while standing still, and constant changes in weight distribution occur to maintain balance. As such, cardiovascular signals that are measured with weighing scale-based sensors typically yield signals with poor SNR, such as the Foot IPG and standing BCG. Thus, such scale-based signals require a stable and high quality synchronous timing reference, to segment individual heartbeat-related signals for signal averaging to yield an averaged signal with higher SNR versus respective individual measurements.

The ECG can be used as the reference (or trigger) signal to segment a series of heartbeat-related signals measured by secondary sensors (optical, electrical, magnetic, pressure, microwave, piezo, etc.) for averaging a series of heartbeat-related signals together, to improve the SNR of the secondary measurement. The ECG has an intrinsically high SNR when measured with body-worn gel electrodes, or via dry electrodes on handgrip sensors. In contrast, the ECG has a low SNR when measured using foot electrodes while standing on said scale platforms; unless the user is standing perfectly still to eliminate electrical noise from the leg muscles firing due to body motion. As such, ECG measurements at the feet while standing are considered to be an unreliable trigger signal (low SNR). Therefore, it is often difficult to obtain a reliable cardiovascular trigger reference timing when using ECG sensors incorporated in base scale platform devices. Both Inan, et al. (IEEE Transactions on Information Technology in Biomedicine, 14:5, 1188-1196, 2010) and Shin, et al. (Physiological Measurement, 30, 679-693, 2009) have shown that the ECG component of the electrical signal measured between the two feet while standing was rapidly overpowered by the electromyogram (EMG) signal resulting from the leg muscle activity involved in maintaining balance.

The accuracy of cardiovascular information obtained from weighing scales is also influenced by measurement time. The number of beats obtained from heartbeats for signal averaging is a function of measurement time and heart rate. Typically, a resting heart rates range from 60 to 100 beats per minute. Therefore, short signal acquisition periods may yield a low number of beats to average, which may cause measurement uncertainty, also known as the standard error in the mean (SEM). SEM is the standard deviation of the sample mean estimate of a population mean. Where, SE is the standard error in the samples N, which is related to the standard error or the population S. The following is an example SE for uncorrelated noise:

${SE} = \frac{S}{\sqrt{N}}$

For example, a five second signal acquisition period may yield a maximum of five to eight beats for ensemble averaging, while a 10 second signal acquisition could yield 10-16 beats. However, the number of beats available for averaging and SNR determination is usually reduced for the following factors; (1) truncation of the first and last ensemble beat in the recording by the algorithm, (2) triggering beats falsely missed by triggering algorithm, (3) cardiorespiratory variability, (4) excessive body motion corrupting the trigger and Foot IPG signal, and (5) loss of foot contact with the measurement electrodes.

Sources of noise can require multiple solutions for SNR improvements for the signal being averaged. Longer measurement times increase the number of beats lost to truncation, false missed triggering, and excessive motion. Longer measurement times also reduce variability from cardiorespiratory effects. If shorter measurement times (e.g., less than 30 seconds) are desired for scale-based sensor platforms, sensing improvements need to tolerate body motion and loss of foot contact with the measurement electrodes.

The human cardiovascular system includes a heart with four chambers, separated by valves that return blood to the heart from the venous system into the right side of the heart, through the pulmonary circulation to oxygenate the blood, which then returns to the left side of the heart, where the oxygenated blood is pressurized by the left ventricles and is pumped into the arterial circulation, where blood is distributed to the organs and tissues to supply oxygen. The cardiovascular or circulatory system is designed to ensure oxygen availability and is often the limiting factor for cell survival. The heart normally pumps five to six liters of blood every minute during rest and maximum cardiac output during exercise increases up to seven-fold, by modulating heart rate and stroke volume. The factors that affect heart rate include autonomic innervation, fitness level, age and hormones. Factors affecting stroke volume include heart size, fitness level, contractility or pre-ejection period, ejection duration, preload or end-diastolic volume, afterload or systemic resistance. The cardiovascular system is constantly adapting to maintain a homeostasis (set point) that minimizes the work done by the heart to maintain cardiac output. As such, blood pressure is continually adjusting to minimize work demands during rest. Cardiovascular disease encompasses a variety of abnormalities in (or that affect) the cardiovascular system that degrade the efficiency of the system, which include but are not limited to chronically elevated blood pressure, elevated cholesterol levels, edema, endothelial dysfunction, arrhythmias, arterial stiffening, atherosclerosis, vascular wall thickening, stenosis, coronary artery disease, heart attack, stroke, renal dysfunction, enlarged heart, heart failure, diabetes, obesity and pulmonary disorders.

Each cardiac cycle results in a pulse of blood being delivered into the arterial tree. The heart completes cycles of atrial systole, delivering blood to the ventricles, followed by ventricular systole delivering blood into the lungs and the systemic arterial circulation, where the diastole cycle begins. In early diastole the ventricles relax and fill with blood, then in mid-diastole the atria and ventricles are relaxed and the ventricles continue to fill with blood. In late diastole, the sinoatrial node (the heart's pacemaker) depolarizes then contracting the atria, the ventricles are filled with more blood and the depolarization then reaches the atrioventricular node and enters the ventricular side beginning the systole phase. The ventricles contract and the blood is pumped from the ventricles to arteries.

The ECG is the measurement of the heart's electrical activity and is described in five phases. The P-wave represents atrial depolarization, the PR interval is the time between the P-wave and the start of the QRS complex. The QRS wave complex represents ventricular depolarization. The QRS complex is the strongest wave in the

ECG and is frequently used as a timing reference for the cardiovascular cycle. Atrial repolarization is masked by the QRS complex. The ST interval represents the period of zero potential between ventricular depolarization and repolarization. The cycle concludes with the T-wave representing ventricular repolarization.

The blood ejected into the arteries creates vascular movements due to the blood's momentum. The blood mass ejected by the heart first travels headward in the ascending aorta and travels around the aortic arch then travels down the descending aorta. The diameter of the aorta increases during the systole phase due to the high compliance (low stiffness) of the aortic wall. Blood traveling in the descending aorta bifurcates in the iliac branch which transitions into a stiffer arterial region due to the muscular artery composition of the leg arteries. The blood pulsation continues down the leg and foot. Along the way, the arteries branch into arteries of smaller diameter until reaching the capillary beds where the pulsatile blood flow turns into steady blood flow, delivering oxygen to the tissues. The blood returns to the venous system terminating in the vena cava, where blood returns to the right atrium of the heart for the subsequent cardiac cycle.

Surprisingly, high quality simultaneous recordings of the Leg IPG and Foot IPG are attainable in a practical manner (e.g., a user operating the device correctly simply by standing on the impedance body scale foot electrodes), and can be used to obtain reliable trigger fiducial timings from the Leg IPG signal. This acquisition can be far less sensitive to motion-induced noise from the Leg EMG that often compromises Leg ECG measurements. Furthermore, it has been discovered that interleaving the two Kelvin electrode pairs for a single foot, result in a design that is insensitive to foot placement within the boundaries of the overall electrode area. As such, the user is not constrained to comply with accurate foot placement on conventional single foot Kelvin arrangements, which are highly prone to introducing motion artifacts into the IPG signal, or result in a loss of contact if the foot is slightly misaligned. Interleaved designs begin when one or more electrode surfaces cross over a single imaginary boundary line separating an excitation and sensing electrode pair. The interleaving is configured to maintain uniform foot surface contact area on the excitation and sensing electrode pair, regardless of the positioning of the foot over the combined area of the electrode pair.

Various aspects of the present disclosure include a weighing scale platform (e.g., scale 110) of an area sufficient for an adult of average size to stand comfortably still and minimize postural swaying. The nominal scale length (same orientation as foot length) is 12 inches and the width is 12 inches. The width can be increased to be consistent with the feet at shoulder width or slightly broader (e.g., 14 to 18 inches, respectively).

FIG. 1D is a flow chart depicting an example manner in which a user-specific physiologic meter or scale may be programmed in accordance with the present disclosure. This flow chart uses a computer processor circuit (or CPU) along with a memory circuit shown herein as user profile memory 146 a. The CPU operates in a low-power consumption mode, which may be in off mode or a low-power sleep mode, and at least one other higher power consumption mode of operation. The CPU can be integrated with presence and/or motion sense circuits, such as a passive infrared (PIR) circuit and/or pyroelectric PIR circuit. In a typical application, the PIR circuit provides a constant flow of data indicative of amounts of radiation sensed in a field of view directed by the PIR circuit. For instance, the PIR circuit can be installed behind an upper surface which is transparent to infrared light (and/or other visible light) of the platform and installed at an angle so that the motion of the user approaching the platform apparatus is sensed. Radiation from the user, upon reaching a certain detectable level, wakes up the CPU which then transitions from the low-power mode, as depicted in block 140, to a regular mode of operation. Alternatively, the low-power mode of operation is transitioned from a response to another remote/wireless input used as a presence to awaken the CPU. In other embodiments, user motion can be detected by an accelerometer integrated in the scale or the motion is sensed with a single integrated microphone or microphone array, to detect the sounds of a user approaching.

Accordingly, from block 140, flow proceeds to block 142 where the user or other intrusion is sensed as data received at the platform apparatus. At block 144, the circuitry assesses whether the received data qualifies as requiring a wake up. If not, flow turns to block 140. If however, wake up is required, flow proceeds from block 144 to block 146 where the CPU assesses whether a possible previous user has approached the platform apparatus. This assessment is performed by the CPU accessing the user profile memory 146A and comparing data stored therein for one or more such previous users with criteria corresponding to the received data that caused the wake up. Such criteria includes, for example, the time of the day, the pace at which the user approached the platform apparatus as sensed by the motion detection circuitry, the height of the user as indicated by the motion sensing circuitry and/or a camera installed and integrated with the CPU, and/or more sophisticated bio-metric data provided by the user and/or automatically by the circuitry in the platform apparatus.

As discussed herein, such sophisticated circuitry can include one or more of the following user-specific attributes: foot length, type of foot arch, weight of user, and/or manner and speed at which the user steps onto the platform apparatus or by user speech (e.g., voice). In some embodiments, facial or body-feature recognition may also be used in connection with the camera and comparisons of images therefrom to images in the user profile memory.

From block 146, flow proceeds to block 148 where the CPU obtains and/or updates user corresponding data in the user profile memory. As a learning program is developed in the user profile memory, each access and use of the platform apparatus is used to expand on the data and profile for each such user. From block 148, flow proceeds to block 150 where a decision is made regarding whether the set of electrodes at the upper surface of the platform are ready for the user, such as may be based on the data obtained from the user profile memory. For example, delays may ensue from the user moving his or her feet about the upper surface of the platform apparatus, as may occur while certain data is being retrieved by the CPU (whether internally or from an external source such as a program or configuration data updates from the Internet cloud) or when the user has stepped over the user-display. If the electrodes are not ready for the user, flow proceeds from block 150 to block 152 to accommodate this delay.

Once the CPU determines that the electrodes are ready for use while the user is standing on the platform surface, flow proceeds to block 160. Stabilization of the user on the platform surface may be ascertained by injecting current through the electrodes via the interleaved arrangement thereof. Where such current is returned via other electrodes for a particular foot and/or foot size, and is consistent for a relatively brief period of time, for example, a few seconds, the CPU can assume that the user is standing still and ready to use the electrodes and related circuitry. At block 160, a decision is made that both the user and the platform apparatus are ready for measuring impedance and certain segments of the user's body, including at least one foot.

The remaining flow of FIG. 1D includes the application and sensing of current through the electrodes for finding the optimal electrodes (162) and for performing impedance measurements (block 164). These measurements are continued until completed at block 166 and all such useful measurements are recorded and are logged in the user profile memory for this specific user, at block 168. At block 172, the CPU generates output data to provide feedback as to the completion of the measurements and, as can be indicated as a request via the user profile for this user, as an overall report on the progress for the user and relative to previous measurements made for this user has stored in the user profile memory. Such feedback may be shown on the user-display, through a speaker with co-located apertures in the platform for audible reception by the user, and/or by vibration circuitry which, upon vibration under control of the CPU, the user can sense through one or both feet while standing on the scale. From this output at block 172, flow returns to the low power mode as indicated at block 174 with the return to the beginning of the flow at the block 140.

FIG. 2A shows an example of the insensitivity to foot placement 200 on scale electrode pairs 205/210 with multiple excitation paths 220 and sensing current paths 215, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure. An aspect of the platform is that it has a thickness and strength to support a human adult of at least 200 pounds without fracturing, and another aspect of the device platform is comprised of at least six electrodes, where the first electrode pair 205 is solid and the second electrode pair 210 are interleaved. Another aspect is the first and second interleaved electrode pairs 205/210 are separated by a distance of at least 40+/−5 millimeters, where the nominal separation of less than 40 millimeters has been shown to degrade the single Foot IPG signal. Another key aspect is the electrode patterns are made from materials with low resistivity such as stainless steel, aluminum, hardened gold, ITO, index matched ITO (IMITO), carbon printed electrodes, conductive tapes, silver-impregnated carbon printed electrodes, conductive adhesives, and similar materials with resistivity lower than 300 ohms/sq. The resistivity can be below 150 ohms/sq. The electrodes are connected to the electronic circuitry in the scale by routing the electrodes around the edges of the scale to the surface below, or through at least one hole in the scale (e.g., a via hole).

Suitable electrode arrangements for dual Foot IPG measurements can be realized in other embodiments. In certain embodiments, the interleaved electrodes are patterned on the reverse side of a thin piece (e.g., less than 2 mm) of high-ion-exchange (HIE) glass, which is attached to a scale substrate and used in capacitive sensing mode. In certain embodiments, the interleaved electrodes are patterned onto a thin piece of paper or plastic which can be rolled up or folded for easy storage. In certain embodiments, the interleaved electrodes are integrated onto the surface of a tablet computer for portable IPG measurements. In certain embodiments, the interleaved electrodes are patterned onto a kapton substrate that is used as a flex circuit.

In certain embodiments, the scale area has a length of 10 inches with a width of eight inches for a miniature scale platform. Alternatively, the scale may be larger (up to 36 inches wide) for use in bariatric class scales.

In the present disclosure, the leg and foot impedance measurements can be simultaneously carried out using a multi-frequency approach, in which the leg and foot impedances are excited by currents modulated at two or more different frequencies, and the resulting voltages are selectively measured using a synchronous demodulator as shown in FIG. 3A. This homodyning approach can be used to separate signals (in this case, the voltage drop due to the imposed current) with very high accuracy and selectivity.

This measurement configuration is based on a four-point configuration in order to minimize the impact of the contact resistance between the electrode and the foot, a practice well-known in the art of impedance measurement. In this configuration the current is injected from a set of two electrodes (the “injection” and “return” electrodes), and the voltage drop resulting from the passage of this current through the resistance is sensed by two separate electrodes (the “sense” electrodes), usually located in the path of the current. Since the sense electrodes are not carrying any current (by virtue of their connection to a high-impedance differential amplifier), the contact impedance does not significantly alter the sensed voltage.

In order to sense two distinct segments of the body (the legs and the foot), two separate current paths are defined by electrode positioning. Therefore two injection electrodes are used, each connected to a current source modulated at a different frequency. The injection electrode for leg impedance is located under the plantar region of the left foot, while the injection electrode for the Foot IPG is located under the heel of the right foot. Both current sources share the same return electrode located under the plantar region of the right foot. This is an illustrative example. Other configurations may be used.

The sensing electrodes can be localized so as to sense the corresponding segments. Leg IPG sensing electrodes are located under the heels of each foot, while the two foot sensing electrodes are located under the heel and plantar areas of the right foot. The inter-digitated nature of the right foot electrodes ensures a four-point contact for proper impedance measurement, irrespectively of the foot position, as already explained.

FIG. 2B shows an example of electrode configurations, consistent with various aspects of the disclosure. As shown by the electrode connections, in some embodiments, ground is coupled to the heel of one foot of the user (e.g., the right foot) and the foot current injection (e.g., excitation paths 220) is coupled to the toes of the respective one foot (e.g., toes of the right foot). The leg current injection is coupled to the toes of the other foot (e.g., toes of the left foot).

FIG. 2C shows an example of electrode configurations, consistent with various aspects of the disclosure. As shown by the electrode connections, in some embodiments, ground is coupled to the heel of one foot of the user (e.g., the right foot) and the foot current injection (e.g., excitation paths 220) is coupled to the toes of the one foot (e.g., toes of the right foot). The leg current injection is coupled to the heels of the other foot of the user (e.g., heels of the left foot).

FIGS. 3A-3B show example block diagrams depicting the circuitry for sensing and measuring the cardiovascular time-varying IPG raw signals and steps to obtain a filtered IPG waveform, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure. The example block diagrams shown in FIGS. 3A-3B are separated in to a leg impedance sub-circuit 300 and a foot impedance sub-circuit 305.

Excitation is provided by way of an excitation waveform circuit 310. The excitation waveform circuit 310 provides a stable amplitude excitation signal by way of various wave shapes of various, frequencies, such as more specifically, a sine wave signal (as is shown in FIG. 3A) or, more specifically, a square wave signal (as shown in FIG. 3B). This excitation waveform (of sine, square, or other wave shape) is fed to a voltage-controlled current source circuit 315 which scales the signal to the desired current amplitude. The generated current is passed through a decoupling capacitor (for safety) to the excitation electrode, and returned to ground through the return electrode (grounded-load configuration). Amplitudes of 1 and 4 mA peak-to-peak are typically used for Leg and Foot IPGs, respectively.

The voltage drop across the segment of interest (legs or foot) is sensed using an instrumentation differential amplifier (e.g., Analog Devices AD8421) 320. The sense electrodes on the scale are AC-coupled to the inputs of the differential amplifier 320 (configured for unity gain), and any residual DC offset is removed with a DC restoration circuit (as exemplified in Burr-Brown App Note Application Bulletin, SBOA003, 1991, or Burr-Brown/Texas Instruments INA118 datasheet). Alternatively, a fully differential input amplification stage can be used which eliminates the need for DC restoration.

The signal is then demodulated with a phase-sensitive synchronous demodulator circuit 325. The demodulation is achieved in this example by multiplying the signal by 1 or −1 synchronously in-phase with the current excitation. Such alternating gain is provided by an operational amplifier (op amp) and an analog switch (SPST), such as an ADG442 from Analog Devices). More specifically, the signal is connected to both positive and negative inputs through 10 kOhm resistors. The output is connected to the negative input with a 10 kOhm resistor as well, and the switch is connected between the ground and the positive input of the op amp. When open, the gain of the stage is unity. When closed (positive input grounded), the stage acts as an inverting amplifier with a gain of −1. Further, fully differential demodulators can alternatively be used which employ pairs of DPST analog switches whose configuration can provide the benefits of balanced signals and cancellation of charge injection artifacts. Alternatively, other demodulators such as analog multipliers or mixers can be used. The in-phase synchronous detection allows the demodulator to be sensitive to only the real, resistive component of the leg or foot impedance, thereby rejecting any imaginary, capacitive components which may arise from parasitic elements associated with the foot to electrode contacts.

Once demodulated, the signal is band-pass filtered (0.4-80 Hz) with a band-pass filter circuit 330 before being amplified with a gain of 100 with a non-inverting amplifier circuit 335 (e.g., using an LT1058 operational amplifier from Linear Technology Inc.). The amplified signal is further amplified by 10 and low-pass filtered (cut-off at 20 Hz) using a low-pass filter circuit 340 such as 2-pole Sallen-Key filter stage with gain. The signal is then ready for digitization and further processing. In certain embodiments, the signal from the demodulator circuit 325 can be passed through an additional low-pass filter circuit 345 to determine body or foot impedance.

In certain embodiments, the generation of the excitation voltage signal, of appropriate frequency and amplitude, is carried out by a microcontroller, such as an MSP430 (Texas Instruments, Inc.) or a PIC18Fxx series (Microchip Technology, Inc.). The voltage waveform can be generated using the on-chip timers and digital input/outputs or pulse width modulation (PWM) peripherals, and scaled down to the appropriate voltage through fixed resistive dividers, active attenuators/amplifiers using on-chip or off-chip operational amplifiers, as well as programmable gain amplifiers or programmable resistors. In certain embodiments, the generation of the excitation frequency signal can be accomplished by an independent quartz crystal oscillator whose output is frequency divided down by a series of toggle flip-flops (such as an ECS-100AC from ECS International, Inc., and a CD4024 from Texas Instruments, Inc.). In certain embodiments, the generation of the wave shape and frequency can be accomplished by a direct digital synthesis (DDS) integrated circuit (such as an AD9838 from Analog Devices, Inc.). In certain embodiments, the generation of the wave shape (either sine or square) and frequency can be accomplished by a voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) which is controlled by a digital microcontroller, or which is part of a phase-locked loop (PLL) frequency control circuit. Alternatively, the waveforms and frequencies can be directly generated by on- or off-chip digital-to-analog converters (DACs).

In certain embodiments, the shape of the excitation is not square, but sinusoidal. Such configuration can reduce the requirements on bandwidth and slew rate for the current source and instrumentation amplifier. Harmonics, potentially leading to higher electromagnetic interference (EMI), can also be reduced. Such excitation may also reduce electronics noise on the circuit itself. Lastly, the lack of harmonics from sine wave excitation may provide a more flexible selection of frequencies in a multi-frequency impedance system, as excitation waveforms have fewer opportunities to interfere between each other. Due to the concentration of energy in the fundamental frequency, sine wave excitation could also be more power-efficient. In certain embodiments, the shape of the excitation is not square, but trapezoidal. Alternatively, raised cosine pulses (RCPs) could be used as the excitation wave shape, providing an intermediate between sine and square waves. RCPs could provide higher excitation energy content for a given amplitude, but with greatly reduced higher harmonics.

To further reduce potential electromagnetic interference (EMI), other strategies may be used, such as by dithering the square wave signal (i.e., introducing jitter in the edges following a fixed or random pattern) which leads to so-called spread spectrum signals, in which the energy is not localized at one specific frequency (or a set of harmonics), but rather distributed around a frequency (or a set of harmonics). Because of the synchronous demodulation scheme, phase-to-phase variability introduced by spread-spectrum techniques will not affect the impedance measurement. Such a spread-spectrum signal can be generated by, but not limited to, specialized circuits (e.g., Maxim MAX31C80, SiTime SiT9001), or generic microcontrollers (see Application Report SLAA291, Texas Instruments, Inc.). These spread-spectrum techniques can be combined with clock dividers to generate lower frequencies as well.

As may be clear to one skilled in the art, these methods of simultaneous measurement of impedance in the leg and foot can be used for standard Body Impedance Analysis (BIA), aiming at extracting the relative content of total water, free-water, fat mass and other body composition measures. Impedance measurements for BIA are typically done at frequencies ranging from kilohertz up to several megahertz. The multi-frequency synchronous detection measurement methods described above can readily be used for such BIA, provided that low-pass filtering (345, FIGS. 3A and 3B) instead of band-pass filtering (330, FIGS. 3A and 3B) is performed following the demodulation. In certain embodiments, a separate demodulator channel may be driven by the quadrature phase of the excitation signal to allow the imaginary component of the body impedance to be extracted in addition to the real component. A more accurate BIA can be achieved by measuring both the real and imaginary components of the impedance. This multi-frequency technique can be combined with traditional sequential measurements used for BIA, in which the impedance is measured at several frequencies sequentially. These measurements are repeated in several body segments for segmental BIAs, using a switch matrix to drive the current into the desired body segments.

While FIG. 2 a shows a circuit and electrode configuration suitable to measure two different segments (legs and one foot), this approach is not readily extendable to more segments due to the shared current return electrode (ground). To overcome this limitation, and provide simultaneous measurements in both feet, the system can be augmented with analog switches to provide time-multiplexing of the impedance measurements in the different segments. This multiplexing can be a one-time sequencing (each segment is measured once), or interleaved at a high-enough frequency that the signal can be simultaneously measured on each segment. The minimum multiplexing rate for proper reconstruction is twice the bandwidth of the measured signal, based on signal processing theory (the Nyquist rate), which equals to about 100 Hz for the impedance signal considered here. The rate must also allow for the signal path to settle in between switching, which usually limits the maximum multiplexing rate. Referring to FIG. 14A, one cycle might start the measurement of the leg impedance and left foot impedances (similarly to previously described, sharing a common return electrode), but then follow with a measurement of the right foot after reconfiguring the switches. For specific information regarding typical switch configurations, reference to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/338,266 filed on Oct. 7, 2015, which is fully incorporated for its specific and general teaching of switch configurations.

Since right and left feet are measured sequentially, one should note that a unique current source (at the same frequency) may be used to measure both, providing that the current source is not connected to the two feet simultaneously through the switches, in which case the current would be divided between two paths. One should also note that a fully-sequential measurement, using a single current source (at a single frequency) successively connected to the three different injection electrodes, could be used as well, with the proper switch configuration sequence (no splitting of the current path).

In certain embodiments, the measurement of various body segments, and in particular the legs, right foot and left foot, is achieved simultaneously due to as many floating current sources as segments to be measured, running at separate frequency so they can individually be demodulated. Such configuration is exemplified in FIG. 14B for three segments (legs, right and left feet). Such configuration has the advantage to provide true simultaneous measurements without the added complexity of time-multiplexing/demultiplexing, and associated switching circuitry. An example of such a floating current source is found in Plickett, et al., Physiological Measurement, 32 (2011). Another approach to floating current sources is the use of transformer-coupled current sources (as depicted in FIG. 14C). Using transformers to inject current into the electrodes enables the use of simpler, grounded-load current sources on the primary, while the electrodes are connected to the secondary. The transformer turns ratio can typically be 1:1, and since frequencies of interest for impedance measurement are typically in the 10-1000 kHz (occasionally 1 kHz for BIA), relatively small pulse transformers can be used. In order to limit the common mode voltage of the body, one of the electrodes in contact with the foot can be grounded.

While certain embodiments presented in the above specification have used current sources for excitation, the excitation can also be performed by a voltage source, where the resulting injection current is monitored by a current sense circuit so that impedance can still be derived by the ratio of the sensed voltage (on the sense electrodes) over the sensed current (injected in the excitation electrodes). It should be noted that broadband spectroscopy methods could also be used for measuring impedances at several frequencies. Combined with time-multiplexing and current switching described above, multi-segment broadband spectroscopy can be achieved.

Various aspects of the present disclosure are directed toward robust timing extraction of the blood pressure pulse in the foot which is achieved by means of a two-step processing. In a first step, the usually high-SNR Leg IPG is used to derive a reference (trigger) timing for each heart pulse. In a second step, a specific timing in the lower-SNR Foot IPG is extracted by detecting its associated feature within a restricted window of time around the timing of the Leg IPG.

Consistent with yet further embodiments of the present disclosure, FIG. 3C depicts an example block diagram of circuitry for operating core circuits and modules, including, for example, the operation of the CPU as in FIG. 1A with the related more specific circuit blocks/modules in FIGS. 3A-3B. As shown in the center of FIG. 3C, the computer circuit 370 is shown with other previously-mentioned circuitry in a generalized manner without showing some of the detailed circuitry (e.g., amplification and current injection/sensing (372)). The computer circuit 370 can be used as a control circuit with an internal memory circuit (or as integrated with the memory circuit for the user profile memory 146A of FIG. 1A) for causing, processing and/or receiving sensed input signals as at block 372. As discussed, these sensed signals can be responsive to injection current and/or these signals can be sensed by less complex grid-based sense circuitry surrounding the platform as is convention in capacitive touch-screen surfaces which, in certain embodiments, the platform includes.

As noted, the memory circuit can be used not only for the user profile memory, but also as to provide configuration and/or program code and/or other data such as user-specific data from another authorized source such as from a user monitoring his/her logged data and/or profile from a remote desk-top. The remote device or desk-top can communicate with and access such data via a wireless communication circuit 376. For example, the wireless communication circuit 376 provides an interface between an app on the user's cellular telephone/tablet and the apparatus, wherefrom the IPhone is the output/input interface for the platform (scale) apparatus including, for example, an output display, speaker and/or microphone, and vibration circuitry; each of these I/O aspects and components being discussed herein in connection with other example embodiments.

A camera 378 and image encoder circuit 380 (with compression and related features) can also be incorporated as an option. As discussed above, the weighing scale components, as in block 382, are also optionally included in the housing which encloses and/or surrounds the platform.

For long-lasting battery life in the platform apparatus (batteries not shown), at least the CPU 370, the wireless communication circuit 376, and other current draining circuits are inactive unless and until activated in response to the intrusion/sense circuitry 388. As shown, one specific implementation employs a Conexant chip (e.g., CX93510) to assist in the low-power operation. This type of circuitry is designed for motion sensors configured with a camera for visual verification and image and video monitoring applications (such as by supporting JPEG and MJPEG image compression and processing for both color and black and white images). When combined with an external CMOS sensor, the chip retrieves and stores compressed JPEG and audio data in an on-chip memory circuit (e.g., 256 KB/128 KB frame buffer) to alleviate the necessity of external memory. The chip uses a simple register set via the microprocessor interface and allows for wide flexibility in terms of compatible operation with another microprocessor.

In one specific embodiment, a method of using the platform with the plurality of electrodes are concurrently contacting a limb of the user, includes operating such to automatically obtain measurement signals from the plurality of electrodes. As noted above, these measurement signals might initially be through less complex (e.g., capacitive grid-type) sense circuitry. Before or while obtaining a plurality of measurement signals by operating the circuitry, the signal-sense circuitry 388 is used to sense wireless-signals indicative of the user approaching the platform and, in response, causing the CPU circuitry 370 to transition from a reduced power-consumption mode of operation and at least one higher power-consumption mode of operation. After the circuitry is operating in the higher power-consumption mode of operation, the CPU accesses the user-corresponding data stored in the memory circuit and causes a plurality of impedance-measurement signals to be obtained by using the plurality of electrodes while they are contacting the user via the platform; therefrom, the CPU generates signals corresponding to cardiovascular timings of the user.

The signal-sense circuit can be employed as a passive infrared detector and with the CPU programmed (as a separate module) to evaluate whether radiation from the passive infrared detector is indicative of a human. For example, sensed levels of radiation that corresponds to a live being, such as a dog, that is less than a three-foot height, and/or has not moved for more than a couple seconds, can be assessed as being a non-human.

Accordingly, as the user is recognized as being human, the CPU is activated and begins to attempt the discernment process of which user might be approaching. This is performed by the CPU accessing the user-corresponding data stored in the memory circuit (the user profile memory). If the user is recognized based on parameters such as discussed above (e.g., time of morning, speed of approach, etc.), the CPU can also select one of a plurality of different types of user-discernible visual/audible/tactile information and for presenting the discerned user with visual/audible/tactile information that was retrieved from the memory as being specific to the user. For example, user-selected visual/audible data can be outputted for the user. Also, responsive to the motion detection indication, the camera can be activated to capture at least one image of the user while the user is approaching the platform (and/or while the user is on the platform to log confirmation of the same user with the measured impedance information). As shown in block 374 of FIG. 3C, where a speaker is also integrated with the CPU, the user can simply command the platform apparatus to start the process and activation proceeds. As previously discussed, the scale can include voice input/output circuitry to receive the user commands via voice commands.

In another method, the circuitry of FIG. 3C is used with the electrodes being interleaved and engaging the user, as a combination weighing scale (via block 382) and a physiologic user-specific impedance-measurement device. By using the impedance-measurement signals and obtaining at least two impedance-measurement signals between one foot of the user and another location of the user, the interleaved electrodes assist the CPU in providing measurement results that indicate one or more of the following user-specific attributes as being indicative or common to the user: foot impedance, foot length, and type of arch, and wherein one or more of the user-specific attributes are accessed in the memory circuit and identified as being specific to the user. This information can be later retrieved by the user, medical and/or security personnel, according to a data-access authorization protocol as might be established upon initial configuration for the user.

FIG. 3D shows an exemplary block diagram depicting the circuitry for interpreting signals received from electrodes (e.g., 372 of FIG. 3C), and/or CPU 370 of FIG. 3C. The input electrodes 375 transmit electrical signals through the patient's body (depending on the desired biometric and physiological test to be conducted) and output electrodes 380 receive the modified signal as affected by a user's electrical impedance 385. Once received by the output electrodes 380, the modified signal is processed by processor circuitry 370 based on the selected test. Signal processing conducted by the processor circuitry 370 is discussed in more detail above (with regard to FIGS. 3A-3B). In certain embodiments of the present disclosure, the circuitry within 370 is provided by Texas Instruments part #AFE4300.

FIG. 4 shows an example block diagram depicting signal processing steps to obtain fiducial references from the individual Leg IPG “beats,” which are subsequently used to obtain fiducials in the Foot IPG, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure. In the first step, as shown in block 400, the Leg IP and the Foot IPG are simultaneously measured. As shown at 405, the Leg IPG is low-pass filtered at 20 Hz with an 8-pole Butterworth filter, and inverted so that pulses have an upward peak. The location of the pulses is then determined by taking the derivative of this signal, integrating over a 100 ms moving window, zeroing the negative values, removing the large artifacts by zeroing values beyond 15× the median of the signal, zeroing the values below a threshold defined by the mean of the signal, and then searching for local maxima. Local maxima closer than a defined refractory period of 300 ms to the preceding ones are dismissed. The result is a time series of pulse reference timings.

As is shown in 410, the foot IPG is low-pass filtered at 25 Hz with an 8-pole Butterworth filter and inverted (so that pulses have an upward peak). Segments starting from the timings extracted (415) from the Leg IPG (reference timings) and extending to 80% of the previous pulse interval, but no longer than one second, are defined in the Foot IPG. This defines the time windows where the Foot IPG is expected to occur, avoiding misdetection outside of these windows. In each segment, the derivative of the signal is computed, and the point of maximum positive derivative (maximum acceleration) is extracted. The foot of the IPG signal is then computed using an intersecting tangent method, where the fiducial (420) is defined by the intersection between a first tangent to the IPG at the point of maximum positive derivative and a second tangent to the minimum of the IPG on the left of the maximum positive derivative within the segment.

The time series resulting from this two-step extraction is used with another signal to facilitate further processing. These timings are used as reference timings to improve the SNR of BCG signals to extract intervals between a timing of the BCG (typically the I-wave) and the Foot IPG for the purpose of computing the PWV, as previously disclosed in U.S. 2013/0310700 (Wiard). In certain embodiments, the timings of the Leg IPG are used as reference timings to improve the SNR of BCG signals, and the foot IPG timings are used to extract intervals between timing fiducials of the improved BCG (typically the I-wave) and the Foot IPG for the purpose of computing the PTT and the (PWV).

In certain embodiments, the processing steps include an individual pulse SNR computation after individual timings are extracted, either in Leg IPG or Foot IPG. Following the computation of the SNRs, pulses with a SNR below a threshold value are eliminated from the time series, to prevent propagating noise. The individual SNRs may be computed in a variety of methods known to one skilled in the art. For instance, an estimated pulse can be computed by ensemble averaging segments of signal around the pulse reference timing. The noise associated with each pulse is defined as the difference between the pulse and the estimated pulse. The SNR is the ratio of the root-mean-square (RMS) value of the estimated pulse over the RMS value of the noise for that pulse.

In certain embodiments, the time interval between the Leg IPG pulses, and the Foot IPG pulses, also detected by the above-mentioned methods, is extracted. The Leg IPG measuring a pulse occurring earlier in the legs compared to the pulse from the Foot IPG, the interval between these two is related to the propagation speed in the lower body, i.e., the peripheral vasculature. This provides complementary information to the interval extracted between the BCG and the Foot IPG for instance, and is used to decouple central versus peripheral vascular properties. It is also complementary to information derived from timings between the BCG and the Leg ICG.

FIG. 5 shows an example flowchart depicting signal processing to segment individual Foot IPG “beats” to produce an averaged IPG waveform of improved SNR, which is subsequently used to determine the fiducial of the averaged Foot IPG, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure. Similar to the method shown in FIG. 4 , the Leg IP and the Foot IPG are simultaneously measured (500), the Leg IPG is low-pass filtered (505), the foot IPG is low-pass filtered (510), and segments starting from the timings extracted (515) from the Leg IPG (reference timings). The segments of the Foot

IPG extracted based on the Leg IPG timings are ensemble-averaged (520) to produce a higher SNR Foot IPG pulse. From this ensemble-averaged signal, the start of the pulse is extracted using the same intersecting tangent approach as described earlier. This approach enables the extraction of accurate timings in the Foot IPG even if the impedance signal is dominated by noise, as shown in FIG. 7B. These timings are used together with timings extracted from the BCG for the purpose of computing the PTT and (PWV). Timings derived from ensemble-averaged waveforms and individual waveforms can also be both extracted, for the purpose of comparison, averaging and error-detection.

Specific timings extracted from the IPG pulses (from either leg or foot) are related (but not limited) to the peak of the pulse, the minimum preceding the peak, or the maximum second derivative (maximum rate of acceleration) preceding the point of maximum derivative. An IPG pulse and the extraction of a fiducial (525) in the IPG can be performed by other signal processing methods, including (but not limited to) template matching, cross-correlation, wavelet-decomposition, or short window Fourier transform.

FIG. 6A shows examples of the Leg IPG signal with fiducials (plot 600); the segmented Leg IPG into beats (plot 605); and the ensemble-averaged Leg IPG beat with fiducials and calculated SNR (plot 610), for an exemplary high-quality recording, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure.

FIG. 6B shows examples of the Foot IPG signal with fiducials derived from the Leg IPG fiducials (plot 600); the segmented Foot IPG into beats (plot 605); and the ensemble-averaged Foot IPG beat with fiducials and calculated SNR (plot 610), for an exemplary high-quality recording, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure.

FIG.7A shows examples of the Leg IPG signal with fiducials (plot 700); the segmented Leg IPG into beats (plot 705); and the ensemble averaged Leg IPG beat with fiducials and calculated SNR (plot 710), for an exemplary low-quality recording, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure.

FIG. 7B shows examples of the Foot IPG signal with fiducials derived from the Leg IPG fiducials (plot 700); the segmented Foot IPG into beats (plot 705); and the ensemble-averaged Foot IPG beat with fiducials and calculated SNR (plot 710), for an exemplary low-quality recording, consistent with aspects of the present disclosure.

FIG. 8 shows an example correlation plot 800 for the reliability in obtaining the low SNR Foot IPG pulse for a 30-second recording, using the first impedance signal as the trigger pulse, from a study including 61 test subjects with various heart rates, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure.

In certain embodiments, a dual-Foot IPG is measured, allowing the detection of blood pressure pulses in both feet. Such information can be used for diagnostic of peripheral arterial diseases (PAD) by comparing the relative PATs in both feet to look for asymmetries. It can also increase the robustness of the measurement by allowing one foot to have poor contact with electrodes (or no contact at all). SNR measurements can be used to assess the quality of the signal in each foot, and to select the best one for downstream analysis. Timings extracted from each foot can be compared and set to flag potentially inaccurate PWV measurements due to arterial peripheral disease, in the event these timings are different by more than a threshold. Alternatively, timings from both feet are pooled to increase the overall SNR if their difference is below the threshold.

In certain embodiments, the disclosure is used to measure a PWV, where the IPG is augmented by the addition of BCG sensing into the weighing scale to determine characteristic fiducials between the BCG and Leg IPG trigger, or the BCG and Foot IPG. The BCG sensors are comprised typically of the same strain gage set used to determine the bodyweight of the user. The load cells are typically wired into a bridge configuration to create a sensitive resistance change with small displacements due to the ejection of the blood into the aorta, where the circulatory or cardiovascular force produce movements within the body on the nominal order of 1-3 Newtons. BCG forces can be greater than or less than the nominal range in cases such as high or low cardiac output.

FIGS. 9A-9B show example configurations to obtain the PTT, using the first IPG as the triggering pulse for the Foot IPG and BCG, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure. The I-wave of the BCG 900 normally depicts the headward force due to cardiac ejection of blood into the ascending aorta which is used as a timing fiducial indicative of the pressure pulse initiation of the user's proximal aorta relative to the user's heart. The J-wave is indicative of timings in the systole phase and also incorporates information related to the strength of cardiac ejection and the ejection duration. The K-Wave provides systolic and vascular information of the user's aorta. The characteristic timings of these and other BCG waves are used as fiducials that can be related to fiducials of the IPG signals of the present disclosure.

FIG. 10 shows nomenclature and relationships of various cardiovascular timings, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure.

FIG. 11 shows an example graph 1100 of PTT correlations for two detection methods (white dots) Foot IPG only, and (black dots) Dual-IPG method; and FIG. 12 shows an example graph 1200 of PWV obtained from the present disclosure compared to the ages of 61 human test subjects, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure.

FIG. 13 shows an example of a scale 1300 with integrated foot electrodes 1305 to inject and sense current from one foot to another foot, and within one foot.

FIGS. 14A-14C show various examples of a scale 1400 with interleaved foot electrodes 1405 to inject/sense current from one foot to another foot, and measure Foot IPG signals in both feet.

FIGS. 15A-15D show an example breakdown of a scale 1500 with interleaved foot electrodes 1505 to inject and sense current from one foot to another foot, and within one foot.

FIG. 16 shows an example block diagram of circuit-based building blocks, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure. The various circuit-based building blocks shown in FIG. 16 can be implemented in connection with the various aspects discussed herein. In the example shown, the block diagram includes foot electrodes 1600 that can collect the IPG signals. Further, the block diagram includes strain gauges 1605, and an LED/photosensor 1610. The foot electrodes 1600 is configured with a leg impedance measurement circuit 1615, a foot impedance measurement circuit 1620, and an optional second foot impedance measurement circuit 1625. The leg impedance measurement circuit 1615, the foot impedance measurement circuit 1620, and the optional second foot impedance measurement circuit 1625 report the measurements collected to a processor circuitry 1645.

The processor circuitry 1645 collects data from a weight measurement circuit 1630 and an optional balance measurement circuit 1635 that are configured with the strain gauges 1605. Further, an optional photoplethysmogram (PPG) measurement circuit 1640, which collects data from the LED/photosensor 1610, provides data to the processor circuitry 1645.

The processor circuitry 1645 is powered via a power circuit 1650. Further, the processor circuitry 1645 collects user input data from a user interface 1655 (e.g., iPad®, smart phone and/or other remote user handy/CPU with a touch screen and/or buttons).). The data collected/measured by the processor circuitry 1645 is shown to the user via a display 1660. Additionally, the data collected/measured by the processor circuitry 1645 can be stored in a memory circuit 1680. Further, the processor circuitry 1645 can optionally control a haptic feedback circuit 1665, a speaker or buzzer 1670, a wired/wireless interface 1675, and an auxiliary sensor 1685.

FIG. 17 shows an example flow diagram, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure. At block 1700, a PWV length is entered. At block 1705, a user's weight, balance, leg, and foot impedance are measured. At 1710, the integrity of signals is checked (e.g., SNR). If the signal integrity check is not met, the user's weight, balance, leg, and foot impedance are measured again (block 1705), if the signals integrity check is met, the leg impedance pulse timings are extracted (as is shown at block 1715). At block 1720, foot impedance and pulse timings are extracted, and at block 1725, BCG timings are extracted. At block 1730, a timings quality check is performed. If the timings quality check is not validated, the user's weight, balance, leg and foot impedance are again measured (block 1705). If the timings quality check is validated, the PWV is calculated (as is shown at block 1735). At block 1740, the PWV is displayed to the user.

FIG. 18 shows an example scale 1800 communicatively coupled to a wireless device, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure. As described herein, a display 1805 displays the various aspects measured by the scale 1800. The scale, in some embodiments, also wirelessly broadcast the measurements to a wireless device 1810. The wireless device 1810, in various embodiments, is implemented as an iPad®, smart phone or other CPU to provide input data for configuring and operating the scale.

As an alternative or complementary user interface, the scale includes a FUI which can be enabled/implementable by one or more foot-based biometrics (for example, with the user being correlated to previously-entered user weight, toe print, an ECG-to-BCG timing relationship, and/or foot size/shape). The user foot-based biometric, in some embodiments, is implemented by the user manually entering data (e.g., a password) on the upper surface or display area of the scale. In implementations in which the scale is configured with a haptic, capacitive or flexible pressure-sensing upper surface, the (upper surface/tapping) touching from or by the user is sensed in the region of the surface and processed according to conventional X-Y grid Signal processing in the logic circuitry/CPU that is within the scale. By using one or more of the accelerometers located within the scale at its corners, such user data entry is sensed by each such accelerometer so long as the user's toe, heel or foot pressure associated with each tap provides sufficient force. Although the present discussion refers to a FUI, embodiments are not so limited. Various embodiments include internal or external GUIs that are in communication with the scale and used to obtain a biometric and that can be in place of the FUI and/or in combination with a FUI. For example, a user device having a GUI, such as tablet, is in communication with the scale via a wired or wireless connection. The user device obtains a biometric, such a finger print, and communicates the biometric to the scale.

In various embodiments, the above discussed user-interface is used with other features described herein for the purpose of outputting user data to external circuitry from a scale and displaying generic health information such as: the configuration data input by the user, the biometric and/or passwords entered by the user, and the user-specific health related data which might include data that is less sensitive to the user (e.g., the user's weight) and data that is more sensitive (e.g., the user's scale obtains cardiograms and other data generated by or provided to the scale and associated with the user's symptoms and/or diagnoses). For such user data, the above described biometrics are used as directed by the user for indicating and defining protocol to permit such data to be exported from the scale to other remote devices indoor locations. In more specific embodiments, the scale operates in different modes of data security including, for example: a default mode in which the user's body mass and/or weight is displayed regardless of any biometric which would associate with the specific user standing on the scale; another mode in which complicated data (or data reviewed infrequently) is only exported from the scale under specific manual commands provided to the scale under specific protocols; and another mode or modes in which the user-specific data that is collected from the scale is processed and accessed based on the type of data. Such data categories include categories of different level of importance and/or sensitivities such as the above-discussed high and low level data and other data that might be very specific to a symptom and/or degrees of likelihood for diagnoses. Optionally, the CPU in the scale is also configured to provide encryption of various levels of sensitivity of the user's data.

For example, in accordance with various embodiments, the above-described FUI is used to provide portions of the user data, clinical indications (e.g., scale-obtained physiological data), generic health information, and/or other feedback to the user. In some embodiments, the scale includes a display configuration filter (e.g., circuitry and/or computer readable medium) configured to discern the data to display to the user and display portion. The display configuration filter discerns which portions of the user data, clinical indications, generic health information and/or other feedback to display to the user on the FUI based on various user demographic information (e.g., age, gender, height, diagnosis) and the amount of data. For example, the generic health information may include an amount of data that if all the data is displayed on the FUI, the data is difficult for a person to read and/or uses multiple display screens.

The display configuration filter discerns portions of the data to display using the scale user interface, such as synopsis of the generic health information (or user data or feedback) and an indication that additional data is displayed on another user device, and other portions to display on the other user device. The other user device is selected by the scale (e.g., the filter) based on various communications settings. The communication settings include settings such as user settings (e.g., the user identifying user devices to output data to), scale-based biometrics (e.g., user configures scale, or default settings, to output data to user devices in response to identifying scale-based biometrics), and/or proximity of the user device (e.g., the scale outputs data to the closest user device among a plurality of user devices and/or in response to the user device being within a threshold distance from the scale), among other settings. For example, the scale determines which portions of the used data, clinical indication, generic health information and/or other feedback to output and outputs the remaining portion of the user data, clinical indication, generic health information and/or other feedback to a particular user device based on user settings/communication authorization (e.g., what user devices are authorized by the user to receive particular user data from the scale), and proximity of the user device to the scale. The determination of which portions to output is based on what type of data is being displayed, how much data is available, and the various user demographic information (e.g., an eighteen year old is able to see better than a fifty year old).

For example, in some specific embodiments, the scale operates in different modes of data security and communication. The different modes of data security and communication are enabled in response to biometrics identified by the user and using the FUI. In some embodiments, the scale is used by multiple users and/or the scale operates in different modes of data security and communication in response to identifying the user and based on biometrics. The different modes of data security and communication include, for example: a first mode (e.g., default mode) in which the user's body mass and/or weight is displayed regardless of any biometric which would associate with the specific user standing on the scale and no data is communicated to external circuitry; a second mode in which complicated/more-sensitive data (or data reviewed infrequently) is only exported from the scale under specific manual commands provided to the scale under specific protocols and in response to a biometric; and third mode or modes in which the user-specific data that is collected from the scale is processed and accessed based on the type of data and in response to a biometric. Such data categories include categories of different levels of importance and/or sensitivities such as the above-discussed high and low level data and other data that might be very specific to a symptom and/or degrees of likelihood for diagnoses. Optionally, the CPU in the scale is also configured to provide encryption of various levels of sensitivity of the user's data.

In some embodiments, the different modes of data security and communication are enabled in response to recognizing the user standing on the scale using a biometric and operating in a particular mode of data security and communication based on user preferences and/or services activated. For example, the different modes of operation include the default mode (as discussed above) in which certain data (e.g., categories of interest, categories of user data, or historical user data) is not communicated from the scale to external circuitry, a first communication mode in which data is communicated to external circuitry as identified in a user profile, a second or more communication modes in which data is communicated to a different external circuitry for further processing. The different communication modes are enabled based on biometrics identified from the user and user settings in a user profile corresponding with each user. Although the different communications are referred to as “modes”, one of skill in the art may appreciate that the communications in the different modes may not (or may) include different media and channels. The different communication modes can include different devices communicated to and/or different data that is communicated based on sensitivity of the data and/or security of the devices.

In a specific embodiment, a first user of the scale may not be identified and/or have a user profile set up. In response to the first user standing on the scale, the scale operates in a default mode. During the default mode, the scale displays the user's body mass and/or weight on the user display and does not output user data. The scale, in various embodiments, displays a prompt (e.g., an icon) on the FUI indicating the first user can establish a user profile. In response to the user selecting the prompt, the scale enters an initialization mode. During the initialization mode, the scale asks the users various questions, such as identification of external circuitry to send data to, identification information of the first user, and/or demographics of the user. The user provides inputs using the FUI to establish various communication modes associated with the user profile and scale-based biometrics to enable the one or more communication modes. The scale further collects user data to identify the scale-based biometrics and stores an indication of the scale-based biometric in the user profile such that during subsequent measurements, the scale recognizes the user and authorizes a particular communication mode. Alternatively, the user provides inputs for the initialization mode using another device that is external to the scale and in communication with the scale (e.g., a cellphone).

A second user of the scale has a user profile set up that indicates the user would like data communicated to a computing device of the user. When the second user stands on the scale, the scale recognizes the second user based on a biometric and operates in a first communication mode. During the first communication mode, the scale outputs at least a portion of the user data to an identified external circuitry. For example, the first communication mode allows the user to upload data from the scale to a user identified external circuitry (e.g., the computing device of the user). The information may include user data and/or user information that has low-user sensitivity, such as user weight and/or bmi. In the first communication mode, the scale performs the processing of the raw sensor data and/or the external circuitry can. For example, the scale sends the raw sensor data and/or additional health information to a user device of the user. The computing device may not provide access to the raw sensor data to the user and/or can send the raw sensor data to another external circuitry for further processing in response to a user input. For example, the computing device can ask the user if the user would like generic health information and/or regulated health information as a service. In response to receiving an indication the user would like the generic health information and/or regulated health information, the computing device outputs the raw sensor data and/or non-regulated health information to another external circuitry for processing, providing to a physician for review, and controlling access, as discussed above.

In one or more additional communication modes, the scale outputs raw sensor data to an external circuitry for further processing. For example, during a second communication mode and a third communication, the scale sends the raw sensor data and/or other data to external circuitry for processing. Using the above-provided example, a third user of the scale has a user profile set up that indicates the third user would like scale-obtained data to be communicated to an external circuitry for further processing, such as to determine generic health information. When the third user stands on the scale, the scale recognizes the third user based on one or more biometrics and operates in a second communication mode. During the second communication mode, the scale outputs raw sensor data to the external circuitry. The external circuitry identifies one or more risks, and, optionally, derives generic health information. In some embodiments, the external circuitry outputs the generic health information to the scale. The scale, in some embodiments, displays a synopsis of the generic health information and/or outputs a full version of the generic health information to another user device for display (such as, using the filter described above) and/or an indication that generic health information can be accessed.

A fourth user of the scale has a user profile set up that indicates the fourth user has enabled a service to access regulated health information. When the fourth user stands on the scale, the scale recognizes the user based on one or more biometrics and operates in a fourth communication mode. In the fourth communication mode, the scale outputs raw sensor data to the external circuitry, and the external circuitry processes the raw sensor data and controls access to the data. For example, the external circuitry may not allow access to the regulated health information until a physician reviews the information. In some embodiments, the external circuitry outputs data to the scale, in response to physician review. For example, the output data can include the regulated health information and/or an indication that regulated health information is ready for review. The external circuitry may be accessed by the user, using the scale and/or another user device. In some embodiments, using the FUI of the scale, the scale displays the regulated health information to the user. The scale, in some embodiments, displays a synopsis of the regulated health information (e.g., clinical indication) and outputs the full version of regulated health information to another user device for display (such as, using the filter described above) and/or an indication that the regulated health information can be accessed to the scale to display. In various embodiments, if the scale is unable to identify a particular (high security) biometric that enables the fourth communication mode, the scale may operate in a different communication mode and may still recognize the user. For example, the scale may operate in a default communication mode in which the user data collected by the scale is stored in a user profile corresponding to the fourth user and on the scale. In some related embodiments, the user data is output to the external circuitry at a different time.

Although the present embodiments illustrates a number of security and communication modes, embodiments in accordance with the present disclosure can include additional or fewer modes. Furthermore, embodiments are not limited to different modes based on different users. For example, a single user may enable different communication modes in response to particular biometrics of the user identified and/or based on user settings in a user profile.

In various embodiments, the scale defines a user data table that defines types of user data and sensitivity values of each type of user data. In specific embodiments, the FUI is used to display the user data table. In other specific embodiments a user interface of a smartphone, tablet, and/or other computing device displays the user data table. For example, a wired or wireless tablet is used, in some embodiments, to display the user data table. The sensitivity values of each type of user data, in some embodiments, define in which communication mode(s) the data type is communicated and/or which biometric is used to enable communication of the data type. In some embodiments, a default or pre-set user data table is displayed and the user revises the user data table using the FUI. The revisions are in response to user inputs using the user's foot and/or contacting or moving relative to the FUI. Although the embodiments are not so limited, the above (and below) described control and display is provided using a wireless or wired tablet or other computing device as a user interface. The output to the wireless or wired tablet, as well as additional external circuitry, is enabled using biometrics. For example, the user is encouraged, in particular embodiments, to configure the scale with various biometrics. The biometric include scale-based biometrics and biometrics from the tablet or other user computing device. The biometric, in some embodiments, used to enable output of data to the tablet and/or other external circuitry includes a higher integrity biometric (e.g., higher likelihood of identifying the user accurately) than a biometric used to identify the user and stored data on the scale.

An example user data table is illustrated below:

Body Mass Scale-stored Index, User- Physician- suggestions Weight, user Specific Provided (symptoms User-data local specific Advertise- Diagnosis/ & Type weather news ments Reports diagnosis) Sensitivity 1 3 5 10 9 (10 = highest, 1 = lowest) The above-displayed table is for illustrative purposes and embodiments in accordance with the present disclosure can include additional user-data types than illustrated, such as cardiogram characteristics, clinical indications, physiological parameters, user goals, demographic information, etc. In various embodiments, the user data table includes additional rows than illustrated. The rows, in specific embodiments, include different data input sources and/or sub-data types (as discussed below). Data input sources include source of the data, such as physician provided, input from the Internet, user provided, from the external circuitry. The different data from the data input sources, in some embodiments, is used alone or in combination.

In accordance with various embodiments, the scale uses a cardiogram of the user and/or other scale-obtained biometrics to differentiate between two or more users. The scale-obtained data includes health data that is sensitive to the user, such that unintentional disclosure of scale-obtained data is not desired. Differentiating between the two or more users and automatically communicating (e.g., without further user input) user data responsive to scale-obtained biometrics, in various embodiments, provides a user-friendly and simple way to communicate data from a scale while avoiding and/or mitigating unintentional (and/or without user consent) communication. For example, the scale, such as during an initialization mode for each of the two or more users and as previously discussed, collects user data to identify the scale-based biometrics and stores an indication of the scale-based biometrics in a user profile corresponding with the respective user. During subsequent measurements, the scale recognizes the particular user by comparing collected signals to the indication of the scale-based biometrics in the user profile. The scale, for example, compares the collected signals to each user profile of the two or more users and identifies a match between the collected signals and the indication of the scale-based biometrics. A match, in various embodiments, is within a range of values of the indication stored. Further, in response to verifying the scale-based biometric(s), a particular communication mode is authorized.

In accordance with a number of embodiments, the scale identifies one or more of the multiple users of the scale that have priority user data. The user data with a priority, as used herein, includes an importance of the user and/or the user data. In various embodiments, the importance of the user is based on parameter values identified and/or user goals, such as the user is an athlete and/or is using the scale to assist in training for an event (e.g., marathon) or is using the scale for other user goals (e.g., a weight loss program). Further, the importance of the user data is based on parameters values and/or user input data indicating a diagnosis of a condition or disease and/or a risk of the user having the condition or disease based on the scale-obtained data. For example, the scale-obtained data of a first user indicates that the user is overweight, recently had an increase in weight, and has a risk of having atrial fibrillation. The first user is identified as a user corresponding with priority user data. A second user of the scale has scale-obtained data indicating a decrease in recovery parameters (e.g., time to return to baseline parameters) and the user inputs an indication that they are training for a marathon. The second user is also identified as a user corresponding with priority user data. The scale displays indications to user with the priority user data, in some embodiments, on how to use to the scale to communicate the user data to external circuitry for further processing, correlation, and/or other features, such as social network connections. Further, the scale, in response to the priority, displays various feedback to the user, such as user-targeted advertisements and/or suggestions. In some embodiments, only users with priority user data have data output to the external circuitry to determine risks, although embodiments in accordance with the present disclosure are not so limited.

In some embodiments, one or more users of the scale have multiple different scale-obtained biometrics used to authorize different communication modes. The different scale-obtained biometrics are used to authorize communication of different levels of sensitivity of the user data, such as the different user-data types and sensitivity values as illustrated in the above-table. For example, in some specific embodiments, the different scale-obtained biometrics include a high security biometric, a medium security biometric, and a low security biometric. Using the above illustrated table as an example, the three different biometrics are used to authorize communication of the user-data types of the different sensitivity values. For instance, the high security biometric authorizes communication of user-data types with sensitivity values of 8-10, the medium security biometric authorizes communication of user-data types with sensitivity values of 4-7, and the low security biometric authorizes communication of user-data types with sensitivity values of 1-3. The user, in some embodiments, can adjust the setting of the various biometrics and authorization of user-data types.

In a specific example, low security biometrics includes estimated weight (e.g., a weight range), and a toe tap on the FUI. Example medium security biometrics includes one or more the low security biometric in addition to length and/or width of the user's foot, and/or a time of day or location of the scale. For example, as illustrated by FIGS. 2A and 13 and discussed with regard to FIG. 3C, the scale includes impedance electrodes that are interleaved and engage the feet of the user. The interleaved electrodes assist in providing measurement results that are indicative of the foot length, foot width, and type of arch. Further, a specific user, in some embodiments, may use the scale at a particular time of the day and/or authorize communication of data at the particular time of the day, which is used to verify identity of the user and authorize the communication. The location of scale, in some embodiments, is based on Global Positioning System (GPS) coordinates and/or a Wi-Fi code. For example, if the scale is moved to a new house, the Wi-Fi code used to communicate data externally from the scale changes. Example high security biometrics include one or more low security biometrics and/or medium security biometrics in addition to cardiogram characteristics and, optionally, a time of day and/or heart rate. Example cardiogram characteristics include a QRS complex, and QRS complex and P/T wave, BCG wave characteristics, and an ECG-to-BCG timing relationship.

In various embodiments, the user adjusts the table displayed above to revise the sensitivity values of each data type. Further, although the above-illustrated table includes a single sensitivity value for each data type, in various embodiments, one or more of the data types are separated into sub-data types and each sub-data type has a sensitivity value. As an example, the user-specific advertisement is separated into: prescription advertisement, external device advertisements, exercise advertisements, and diet plan advertisement. Alternatively and/or in addition, the sub-data types for user-specific advertisement include generic advertisements based on a demographic of the user and advertisements in response to scale collected data (e.g., advertisement for a device in response to physiologic parameters), as discussed further herein.

For example, weight data includes the user's weight and historical weight as collected by the scale. In some embodiments, weight data includes historical trends of the user's weight and correlates to dietary information and/or exercise information, among other user data. Body mass index data, includes the user's body mass index as determined using the user's weight collected by the scale and height. In some embodiments, similar to weight, body mass index data includes history trends of the user's body mass index and correlates to various other user data.

User-specific advertisement data includes various prescriptions, exercise plans, dietary plans, and/or other user devices and/or sensors for purchase, among other advertisements. The user-specific advertisements, in various embodiments, are correlated to input user data and/or scale-obtained data. For example, the advertisements include generic advertisements that are relevant to the user based on a demographic of the user. Further, the advertisements include advertisements that are responsive to scale collected data (e.g., physiological parameter includes a symptom or problem and advertisement is correlated to the symptom or problem). A number of specific examples include advertisements for beta blockers to slow heart rate, advertisements for a user wearable device (e.g., Fitbit®) to monitor heart rate, and advertisements for a marathon exercise program (such as in response to an indication the user is training for a marathon), etc.

Physician provided diagnosis/report data includes data provided by a physician and, in various embodiments, is in responsive to the physician reviewing the scale-obtained data. For example, the physician provided diagnosis/report data includes diagnosis of a disorder/condition by a physician, prescription medication prescribed by a physician, and/or reports of progress by a physician, among other data. In various embodiments, the physician provided diagnosis/reports are provided to the scale from external circuitry, which includes and/or accesses a medical profile of the user.

Suggestion data includes data that provides suggestions or advice for symptoms, diagnosis, and/or user goals. For example, the suggestions include advice for training that is user specific (e.g., exercise program based on user age, weight, and cardiogram data or exercise program for training for an event or reducing time to complete an event, such as a marathon), suggestions for reducing symptoms including dietary, exercise, and sleep advice, and/or suggestions to see a physician, among other suggestions. Further, the suggestions or advice include reminders regarding prescriptions. For example, based on physician provided diagnosis/report data and/or user inputs, the scale identifies the user is taking a prescription medication. The identification includes the amount and timing of when the user takes the medication, in some embodiments. The scale reminds the user and/or asks for verification of consumption of the prescription medication using the FUI.

As further specific examples, recent discoveries may align and associate different attributes of scale-based user data collected by the scale to different tools, advertisements, and physician provided diagnosis. For example, it has recently been discovered that atrial fibrillation is more directly correlated with obesity. The scale collects various user data and monitors weight and various components/symptoms of atrial fibrillation. In a specific embodiment, the scale recommends/suggests to the user to: closely monitor weight, recommends a diet, goals for losing weight, and correlates weight gain and losses for movement in cardiogram data relative to arrhythmia. The movement in cardiogram data relative to arrhythmia, in specific embodiments, is related to atrial fibrillation. For example, atrial fibrillation is associated with indiscernible p-waves and beat to beat fluctuations. Thereby, the scale correlates weight gain/loss with changes in amplitude (e.g., discernibility) of a p-wave of a cardiogram (preceding a QRS complex) and changes in beat to beat fluctuations.

FIGS. 19A-19C show example impedance as measured through different parts of the foot based on the foot position, consistent with various aspects of the present disclosure. For instance, example impedance measurement configurations may be implemented using a dynamic electrode configuration for measurement of foot impedance and related timings. Dynamic electrode configuration may be implemented using independently-configurable electrodes to optimize the impedance measurement. As shown in FIG. 19A, interleaved electrodes 1900 are connected to an impedance processor circuit 1905 to determine foot length, foot position, and/or foot impedance. As is shown in FIG. 19B, an impedance measurement is determined regardless of foot position 1910 based on measurement of the placement of the foot across the electrodes 1900. This is based in part in the electrodes 1900 that are engaged (blackened) and in contact with the foot (based on the foot position 1910), which is shown in FIG. 19C.

More specifically regarding FIG. 19A, configuration includes connection/de-connection of the individual electrodes 1900 to the impedance processor circuit 1905, their configuration as current-carrying electrodes (injection or return), sense electrodes (positive or negative), or both. The configuration is preset based on user information, or updated at each measurement (dynamic reconfiguration) to optimize a given parameter (impedance SNR, measurement location). The system algorithmically determines which electrodes under the foot to use in order to obtain the highest SNR in the pulse impedance signal. Such optimization algorithm may include iteratively switching configurations and measuring the impedance, and selecting the best suited configuration. Alternatively, the system first, through a sequential impedance measurement between each individual electrode 1900 and another electrode in contact with the body (such as an electrode in electrode pair 205 on the other foot), determine which electrodes are in contact with the foot. By determining the two most apart electrodes, the foot size is determined. Heel location can be determined in this manner, as can other characteristics such as foot arch type. These parameters are used to determine programmatically (in an automated manner by CPU/logic circuitry) which electrodes are selected for current injection and return (and sensing if a Kelvin connection issued) to obtain the best foot IPG.

In various embodiments involving the dynamically reconfigurable electrode array 1900/1905, an electrode array set is selected to measure the same portion/segment of the foot, irrespective of the foot location on the array. FIG. 19B illustrates the case of several foot positions on a static array (a fixed set of electrodes are used for measurement at the heel and plantar/toe areas, with a fixed gap of an inactive electrode or insulating material between them). Depending on the position of the foot, the active electrodes are contacting the foot at different locations, thereby sensing a different volume/segment of the foot. If the IPG is used by itself (e.g., for heart measurement), such discrepancies may be non-consequential. However, if timings derived from the IPG are referred to other timings (e.g., R-wave from the ECG, or specific timing in the BCG), such as for the calculation of a PTT or PWV, the small shifts in IPG timings due to the sensing of slightly different volumes in the foot (e.g., if the foot is not always placed at the same position on the electrodes) can introduce an error in the calculation of the interval. With respect to FIG. 19B, the timing of the peak of the IPG from the foot placement on the right (sensing the toe/plantar region) is later than from the foot placement on the left, which senses more of the heel volume (the pulse reaches first the heel, then the plantar region). Factors influencing the magnitude of these discrepancies include foot shape (flat or not) and foot length.

Various embodiments address challenges relating to foot placement. FIG. 19C shows an example embodiment involving dynamic reconfiguration of the electrodes to reduce such foot placement-induced variations. As an example, by sensing the location of the heel first (as described above), it is possible to activate a subset of electrodes under the heel, and another subset of electrodes separated by a fixed distance (1900). The other electrodes (e.g., unused electrodes) are left disconnected. The sensed volume will therefore be the same, producing consistent timings. The electrode configuration leading to the most consistent results may be informed by the foot impedance, foot length, the type of arch (all of which can be measured by the electrode array as shown above), but also by the user ID (foot information can be stored for each user, then looked up based on automatic user recognition or manual selection (e.g., in a look-up-table stored for each user in a memory circuit accessible by the CPU circuit in the scale).

In certain embodiments, the apparatus measures impedance using a plurality of electrodes contacting one foot and with at least one other electrode (typically many) at a location distal from the foot. The plurality of electrodes (contacting the one foot) is arranged on the platform and in a pattern configured to inject current signals and sense signals in response thereto, for the same segment of the foot so that the timing of the pulse-based measurements does not vary because the user placed the one foot at a slightly different position on the platform or scale. In FIG. 19A, the foot-to-electrode locations for the heel are different locations than that shown in FIGS. 19B and 19C. As this different foot placement can occur from day to day for the user, the timing and related impedance measurements are for the same (internal) segment of the foot. By having the processor circuit inject current and sense responsive signals to first locate the foot on the electrodes (e.g., sensing where positions of the foot's heel plantar regions and/or toes), the pattern of foot-to-electrode locations permits the foot to move laterally, horizontally and both laterally and horizontally via the different electrode locations, while collecting impedance measurements relative to the same segment of the foot.

The BCG/IPG system can be used to determine the PTT of the user, by identification of the average I-Wave or derivative timing near the I-Wave from a plurality of BCG heartbeat signals obtained simultaneously with the Dual-IPG measurements of the present disclosure to determine the relative PTT along an arterial segment between the ascending aortic arch and distal pulse timing of the user's lower extremity. In certain embodiments, the BCG/IPG system is used to determine the PWV of the user, by identification of the characteristic length representing the length of the user's arteries, and by identification of the average I-Wave or derivative timing near the I-Wave from a plurality of BCG heartbeat signals obtained simultaneously with the Dual-IPG measurements of the present disclosure to determine the relative PTT along an arterial segment between the ascending aortic arch and distal pulse timing of the user's lower extremity. The system of the present disclosure and alternate embodiments may be suitable for determining the arterial stiffness (or arterial compliance) and/or cardiovascular risk of the user regardless of the position of the user's feet within the bounds of the interleaved electrodes. In certain embodiments, the weighing scale system incorporated the use of strain gage load cells and six or eight electrodes to measure a plurality of signals including: bodyweight, BCG, body mass index, fat percentage, muscle mass percentage, and body water percentage, heart rate, heart rate variability, PTT, and PWV measured simultaneously or synchronously when the user stands on the scale to provide a comprehensive analysis of the health and wellness of the user.

In other certain embodiments, the PTT and PWV are computed using timings from the Leg IPG or Foot IPG for arrival times, and using timings from a sensor located on the upper body (as opposed to the scale measuring the BCG) to detect the start of the pulse. Such sensor may include an impedance sensor for impedance cardiography, a hand-to-hand impedance sensor, a photoplethysmogram on the chest, neck, head, arms or hands, or an accelerometer on the chest (seismocardiograph) or head.

Communication of the biometric information is another aspect of the present disclosure. The biometric results from the user are stored in the memory on the scale and displayed to the user via a display on the scale, audible communication from the scale, and/or the data is communicated to a peripheral device such as a computer, smart phone, tablet computing device. The communication occurs to the peripheral device with a wired connection, or can be sent to the peripheral device through wireless communication protocols such as Bluetooth or WiFi. Computations such as signal analyses described therein may be carried out locally on the scale, in a smartphone or computer, or in a remote processor (cloud computing).

Other aspects of the present disclosure are directed toward apparatuses or methods that include the use of at least two electrodes that contacts feet of a user. Further, circuitry is provided to determine a pulse arrival time at the foot based on the recording of two or more impedance signals from the set of electrodes. Additionally, a second set of circuitry is provided to extract a first pulse arrival time from a first impedance signal and use the first pulse arrival time as a timing reference to extract and process a second pulse arrival time in a second impedance signal.

Various embodiments are implemented in accordance with, and fully incorporating by reference for their general teachings, the above-identified PCT Applications and U.S. Provisional Applications (including PCT Ser. No. PCT/US2016/062484 and PCT Ser. No. PCT/US2016/062505), which teachings are also incorporated by reference specifically concerning physiological scales and related measurements and communications such as exemplified by disclosure in connection with FIGS. 1a, 1b, 1e, 1f, and 2b-2e in PCT Ser. No. PCT/US2016/062484 and FIGS. 1a, 1b, 1f, 1g, 1k, 1m, and 1n in PCT. Ser. No. PCT/US2016/062505, and related disclosure in the above-identified U.S. Provisional Applications. For example, above-identified U.S. Provisional Application(Ser. No. 62/258,253), which teachings are also incorporated by reference specifically concerning using a scale to instruct a user to have a particular posture while obtaining scale-data features and aspects as exemplified by disclosure in connection with FIGS. 1a-1b of the underlying provisional; U.S. Provisional Application (Ser. No. (Ser. No. 62/265,833), which teachings are also incorporated by reference specifically to securely communicating and storing scale data, identifying risks that a user has a condition, and providing generic information correlating to the condition to the user features and aspects as described in connection with FIGS. 1a-1b in the underlying provisional; and U.S. Provisional Application (Ser. No. 62/266,523), which teachings are also incorporated by reference specifically concerning grouping users into inter and intra scale social groups based on aggregated user data sets, and providing normalized user data to other users in the social group aspects as exemplified by disclosure in connection with FIGS. 1a-1c of the underlying provisional. For instance, embodiments herein and/or in the PCT and/or provisional applications may be combined in varying degrees (including wholly). Reference may also be made to the experimental teachings and underlying references provided in the PCT and/or provisional applications. Embodiments discussed in the provisional applicants are not intended, in any way, to be limiting to the overall technical disclosure, or to any part of the claimed invention unless specifically noted.

Reference may also be made to published patent documents U.S. Patent Publication 2010/0094147 and U.S. Patent Publication 2013/0310700, which are, together with the references cited therein, herein fully incorporated by reference for the purposes of sensors and sensing technology. The aspects discussed therein may be implemented in connection with one or more of embodiments and implementations of the present disclosure (as well as with those shown in the figures). In view of the description herein, those skilled in the art will recognize that many changes may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure.

As illustrated herein, various circuit-based building blocks and/or modules may be implemented to carry out one or more of the operations/activities described herein shown in the block-diagram-type figures. In such contexts, these building blocks and/or modules represent circuits that carry out these or related operations/ activities. For example, in certain embodiments discussed above (such as the pulse circuitry modularized as shown in FIGS. 3A-3B), one or more blocks/modules are discrete logic circuits or programmable logic circuits for implementing these operations/activities, as in the circuit blocks/modules shown. In certain embodiments, the programmable circuit is one or more computer circuits programmed to execute a set (or sets) of instructions (and/or configuration data). The instructions (and/or configuration data) can be in the form of firmware or software stored in and accessible from a memory circuit. As an example, first and second modules/blocks include a combination of a CPU hardware-based circuit and a set of instructions in the form of firmware, where the first module/block includes a first CPU hardware circuit with one set of instructions and the second module/block includes a second CPU hardware circuit with another set of instructions.

Based upon the above discussion and illustrations, those skilled in the art will readily recognize that various modifications and changes may be made to the present disclosure without strictly following the exemplary embodiments and applications illustrated and described herein. For example, the input terminals as shown and discussed may be replaced with terminals of different arrangements, and different types and numbers of input configurations (e.g., involving different types of input circuits and related connectivity). Further, the various features and operations/actions, in accordance with various embodiments, can be combined with various different features and operations/actions and in various combinations. Such modifications do not depart from the true spirit and scope of the present disclosure, including that set forth in the following claims. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A system comprising: a scale including a platform and including force sensor circuitry to sense a user on the platform; the platform including an interface circuit to receive reference information corresponding to the user, including computer-processing circuitry to store the reference information corresponding to the user, and including a plurality of electrodes and a data-procurement circuit to collect PWV (pulse-wave velocity) data of the user while the user is engaged with the platform by causing current sourced from within the scale to pass between the plurality of electrodes and to generate user-specific cardio-related physiologic data based on the collected PWV data of the user; and a risk-assessment logic circuit, communicatively coupled to or integrated with the computer-processing circuitry, to indicate a likely condition or risk corresponding to the user-specific cardio-related physiologic data as indicated by the measured PWV of the user by generating a signal as an alert corresponding to the likely condition or risk, and wherein the platform is to receive and store, via the interface circuit, further user-specific cardio-related physiologic data which corresponds the likely condition or risk and the risk-assessment logic circuit is to use the further user-specific cardio-related physiologic data based on further PWV (pulse-wave velocity) data of the user collected while the user is engaged with the platform.
 2. The system of claim 1, wherein the received reference information corresponding to the user includes cardio-physiologic reference information which is to be used by the risk-assessment logic circuit to indicate the likely condition or risk corresponding to the user-specific cardio-related physiologic data.
 3. The system of claim 1, wherein the risk-assessment logic circuit is to indicate that the likely condition or risk associated with high blood pressure.
 4. The system of claim 1, wherein the risk-assessment logic circuit is to indicate that the likely condition or risk due to a change in blood pressure.
 5. The system of claim 1, further including an IPG circuit, coupled to or integrated with the platform.
 6. The system of claim 1, further including a BCG circuit, coupled to or integrated with the platform.
 7. The system of claim 1, further including a BCG circuit and an IPG circuit, coupled to or integrated with the platform, wherein the BCG circuit and the IPG circuit are to determine characteristic fiducials between a BCG generated by the BCG circuit.
 8. The system of claim 1, further including a blood pressure sensor, coupled to or integrated with the platform, to measure blood pressure specific to the user.
 9. The system of claim 1, wherein the computer-processing circuitry is to store a user-specific profile with data corresponding to parameters of the user as measured by at least one of: platform-based circuitry including the plurality of electrodes and the data-procurement circuit and the other circuitry.
 10. The system of claim 1, wherein the interface circuit is to receive information to update the reference information to be used by the platform to generate further user-specific cardio-related physiologic data.
 11. The system of claim 1, wherein the interface circuit is to report a second indication as a change in a condition of the user that is linked to the likely condition or risk.
 12. A method comprising: sensing, via a scale including a platform and including force sensor circuitry, a user on the platform; receiving and storing, via an interface circuit and computer-processing circuitry integrated with the platform, reference information corresponding to the user, the reference information corresponding to the user; collecting, via a plurality of electrodes and a data-procurement circuit integrated with the platform, PWV (pulse-wave velocity) data of the user while the user is engaged with the platform by causing current sourced from within the scale to pass between the plurality of electrodes and to generate user-specific cardio-related physiologic data based on the collected PWV data of the user; and indicating, via a risk-assessment logic circuit communicatively coupled to or integrated with the computer-processing circuitry, a likely condition or risk corresponding to the user-specific cardio-related physiologic data as indicated by the measured PWV of the user by generating a signal as an alert corresponding to the likely condition or risk, and wherein the platform receives and stores further user-specific cardio-related physiologic data which corresponds the likely condition or risk and the risk-assessment logic circuit is to use the further user-specific cardio-related physiologic data based on further PWV (pulse-wave velocity) data of the user collected while the user is engaged with the platform.
 13. The method of claim 12, wherein the received reference information corresponding to the user includes cardio-physiologic reference information indicates the likely condition or risk corresponding to the user-specific cardio-related physiologic data.
 14. The method of claim 12, wherein the risk-assessment logic circuit indicates that the likely condition or risk associated with high blood pressure.
 15. The method of claim 12, wherein the risk-assessment logic circuit indicates that the likely condition or risk due to a change in blood pressure.
 16. The method of claim 12, further including using a blood pressure sensor, coupled to or integrated with the platform, to measure blood pressure specific to the user.
 17. The method of claim 12, wherein the computer-processing circuitry stores a user-specific profile with data corresponding to parameters of the user as measured by at least one of: platform-based circuitry including the plurality of electrodes and the data-procurement circuit and the other circuitry.
 18. The method of claim 12, wherein the interface circuit receives information to update the reference information to be used by the platform to generate further user-specific cardio-related physiologic data.
 19. The method of claim 12, wherein the interface circuit reports a second indication as a change in a condition of the user that is linked to the likely condition or risk. 